Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
HCI related papers of Interacción 2004
Raquel Navarro-Prieto ; Jesús Lorés Vidal (eds.)
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial
No disponible.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
No disponibles.
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2006 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-1-4020-4204-1
ISBN electrónico
978-1-4020-4205-8
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2006
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer 2006
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
An Expert-Based Usability Evaluation of the EvalAccess Web Service
Julio Abascal; Myriam Arrue; Inmaculada Fajardo; Nestor Garay
The CDIO Initiative responds in an integrated and pragmatic way to the historical context in which engineering education finds itself and to the challenges that lie in the future. The Initiative began with four universities in two countries, and has expanded rapidly in terms of scope and participating universities. The initial programs were typically within the domains of mechanical, vehicular and electronic engineering, but the CDIO approach has now been implemented in programs in chemical engineering, material science and engineering, and bioengineering. The model has been applied to reform initiatives affecting all engineering programs at a university, and as a template for national initiatives and evaluation schemes. The number of universities has now expanded to more than 22 universities in 12 countries on nearly every continent. Development is underway at universities characterized as research-intensive or teaching-focused; large or small; private or public; or historically focused on minority and underrepresented populations. Regional CDIO Centers in North America, the Nordic countries, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and Southern Africa, have been established to provide opportunities for the exchange of ideas and support for implementation in local regions. A number of vehicles, tools, and forums for disseminating and developing the CDIO approach have been created, including the website and the annual international conferences.
Pp. 1-17
Adaptive and Context-Aware Hypermedia Model for Users with Communication Disabilities
M. Gea; M.J. Rodríguez; M.L. Rodríguez; N. Medina; R. López-Cózar; P. Paderewski; F.L. Gutiérrez
The CDIO Initiative responds in an integrated and pragmatic way to the historical context in which engineering education finds itself and to the challenges that lie in the future. The Initiative began with four universities in two countries, and has expanded rapidly in terms of scope and participating universities. The initial programs were typically within the domains of mechanical, vehicular and electronic engineering, but the CDIO approach has now been implemented in programs in chemical engineering, material science and engineering, and bioengineering. The model has been applied to reform initiatives affecting all engineering programs at a university, and as a template for national initiatives and evaluation schemes. The number of universities has now expanded to more than 22 universities in 12 countries on nearly every continent. Development is underway at universities characterized as research-intensive or teaching-focused; large or small; private or public; or historically focused on minority and underrepresented populations. Regional CDIO Centers in North America, the Nordic countries, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and Southern Africa, have been established to provide opportunities for the exchange of ideas and support for implementation in local regions. A number of vehicles, tools, and forums for disseminating and developing the CDIO approach have been created, including the website and the annual international conferences.
Pp. 19-28
Decoupling Personalization Aspects in Mobile Applications
Arturo Zambrano; Silvia Gordillo; Luis Norberto Polasek
The CDIO Initiative responds in an integrated and pragmatic way to the historical context in which engineering education finds itself and to the challenges that lie in the future. The Initiative began with four universities in two countries, and has expanded rapidly in terms of scope and participating universities. The initial programs were typically within the domains of mechanical, vehicular and electronic engineering, but the CDIO approach has now been implemented in programs in chemical engineering, material science and engineering, and bioengineering. The model has been applied to reform initiatives affecting all engineering programs at a university, and as a template for national initiatives and evaluation schemes. The number of universities has now expanded to more than 22 universities in 12 countries on nearly every continent. Development is underway at universities characterized as research-intensive or teaching-focused; large or small; private or public; or historically focused on minority and underrepresented populations. Regional CDIO Centers in North America, the Nordic countries, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and Southern Africa, have been established to provide opportunities for the exchange of ideas and support for implementation in local regions. A number of vehicles, tools, and forums for disseminating and developing the CDIO approach have been created, including the website and the annual international conferences.
Pp. 29-40
Empirical User Studies in the Design of Mobile Distributed Collaborative Applications
Raquel Navarro-Prieto; Eva Patrícia Gil Rodríguez
The CDIO Initiative responds in an integrated and pragmatic way to the historical context in which engineering education finds itself and to the challenges that lie in the future. The Initiative began with four universities in two countries, and has expanded rapidly in terms of scope and participating universities. The initial programs were typically within the domains of mechanical, vehicular and electronic engineering, but the CDIO approach has now been implemented in programs in chemical engineering, material science and engineering, and bioengineering. The model has been applied to reform initiatives affecting all engineering programs at a university, and as a template for national initiatives and evaluation schemes. The number of universities has now expanded to more than 22 universities in 12 countries on nearly every continent. Development is underway at universities characterized as research-intensive or teaching-focused; large or small; private or public; or historically focused on minority and underrepresented populations. Regional CDIO Centers in North America, the Nordic countries, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and Southern Africa, have been established to provide opportunities for the exchange of ideas and support for implementation in local regions. A number of vehicles, tools, and forums for disseminating and developing the CDIO approach have been created, including the website and the annual international conferences.
Pp. 41-54
Remote Support to Plastic User Interfaces: a Semantic View
M. Sendín; J. Lorés
The CDIO Initiative responds in an integrated and pragmatic way to the historical context in which engineering education finds itself and to the challenges that lie in the future. The Initiative began with four universities in two countries, and has expanded rapidly in terms of scope and participating universities. The initial programs were typically within the domains of mechanical, vehicular and electronic engineering, but the CDIO approach has now been implemented in programs in chemical engineering, material science and engineering, and bioengineering. The model has been applied to reform initiatives affecting all engineering programs at a university, and as a template for national initiatives and evaluation schemes. The number of universities has now expanded to more than 22 universities in 12 countries on nearly every continent. Development is underway at universities characterized as research-intensive or teaching-focused; large or small; private or public; or historically focused on minority and underrepresented populations. Regional CDIO Centers in North America, the Nordic countries, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and Southern Africa, have been established to provide opportunities for the exchange of ideas and support for implementation in local regions. A number of vehicles, tools, and forums for disseminating and developing the CDIO approach have been created, including the website and the annual international conferences.
Pp. 55-70
HyCo Authoring Features
Francisco J. García; Adriana Berlanga; Jorge Carabias; Ana Gil; Joaquín García
The CDIO Initiative responds in an integrated and pragmatic way to the historical context in which engineering education finds itself and to the challenges that lie in the future. The Initiative began with four universities in two countries, and has expanded rapidly in terms of scope and participating universities. The initial programs were typically within the domains of mechanical, vehicular and electronic engineering, but the CDIO approach has now been implemented in programs in chemical engineering, material science and engineering, and bioengineering. The model has been applied to reform initiatives affecting all engineering programs at a university, and as a template for national initiatives and evaluation schemes. The number of universities has now expanded to more than 22 universities in 12 countries on nearly every continent. Development is underway at universities characterized as research-intensive or teaching-focused; large or small; private or public; or historically focused on minority and underrepresented populations. Regional CDIO Centers in North America, the Nordic countries, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and Southern Africa, have been established to provide opportunities for the exchange of ideas and support for implementation in local regions. A number of vehicles, tools, and forums for disseminating and developing the CDIO approach have been created, including the website and the annual international conferences.
Pp. 71-79
Design and evaluation of a simple eLearning authoring tool
S. Sayago; J. Martínez; J. Blat; R. García; D. Griffiths; F. Casado
The CDIO Initiative responds in an integrated and pragmatic way to the historical context in which engineering education finds itself and to the challenges that lie in the future. The Initiative began with four universities in two countries, and has expanded rapidly in terms of scope and participating universities. The initial programs were typically within the domains of mechanical, vehicular and electronic engineering, but the CDIO approach has now been implemented in programs in chemical engineering, material science and engineering, and bioengineering. The model has been applied to reform initiatives affecting all engineering programs at a university, and as a template for national initiatives and evaluation schemes. The number of universities has now expanded to more than 22 universities in 12 countries on nearly every continent. Development is underway at universities characterized as research-intensive or teaching-focused; large or small; private or public; or historically focused on minority and underrepresented populations. Regional CDIO Centers in North America, the Nordic countries, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and Southern Africa, have been established to provide opportunities for the exchange of ideas and support for implementation in local regions. A number of vehicles, tools, and forums for disseminating and developing the CDIO approach have been created, including the website and the annual international conferences.
Pp. 81-88
Setting Up a Multimodal Dialogue System for Ubiquitous Environmen
Ramón López-Cózar; Zoraida Callejas; Miguel Gea; José L. Garrido; Marcelino Cabrera
The CDIO Initiative responds in an integrated and pragmatic way to the historical context in which engineering education finds itself and to the challenges that lie in the future. The Initiative began with four universities in two countries, and has expanded rapidly in terms of scope and participating universities. The initial programs were typically within the domains of mechanical, vehicular and electronic engineering, but the CDIO approach has now been implemented in programs in chemical engineering, material science and engineering, and bioengineering. The model has been applied to reform initiatives affecting all engineering programs at a university, and as a template for national initiatives and evaluation schemes. The number of universities has now expanded to more than 22 universities in 12 countries on nearly every continent. Development is underway at universities characterized as research-intensive or teaching-focused; large or small; private or public; or historically focused on minority and underrepresented populations. Regional CDIO Centers in North America, the Nordic countries, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and Southern Africa, have been established to provide opportunities for the exchange of ideas and support for implementation in local regions. A number of vehicles, tools, and forums for disseminating and developing the CDIO approach have been created, including the website and the annual international conferences.
Pp. 89-101
Usability Effort: a new concept to measure the usability of an interactive system based on UCD
T. Granollers; J. Lorés
The CDIO Initiative responds in an integrated and pragmatic way to the historical context in which engineering education finds itself and to the challenges that lie in the future. The Initiative began with four universities in two countries, and has expanded rapidly in terms of scope and participating universities. The initial programs were typically within the domains of mechanical, vehicular and electronic engineering, but the CDIO approach has now been implemented in programs in chemical engineering, material science and engineering, and bioengineering. The model has been applied to reform initiatives affecting all engineering programs at a university, and as a template for national initiatives and evaluation schemes. The number of universities has now expanded to more than 22 universities in 12 countries on nearly every continent. Development is underway at universities characterized as research-intensive or teaching-focused; large or small; private or public; or historically focused on minority and underrepresented populations. Regional CDIO Centers in North America, the Nordic countries, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and Southern Africa, have been established to provide opportunities for the exchange of ideas and support for implementation in local regions. A number of vehicles, tools, and forums for disseminating and developing the CDIO approach have been created, including the website and the annual international conferences.
Pp. 103-117
Groupware Task Analysis and Distributed Cognition: Task Modeling In a Case of Multiple Users and Multiple Organizations
Mari Carmen Puerta Melguizo; Cristina Chisalita; Gerrit C. van der Veer
The CDIO Initiative responds in an integrated and pragmatic way to the historical context in which engineering education finds itself and to the challenges that lie in the future. The Initiative began with four universities in two countries, and has expanded rapidly in terms of scope and participating universities. The initial programs were typically within the domains of mechanical, vehicular and electronic engineering, but the CDIO approach has now been implemented in programs in chemical engineering, material science and engineering, and bioengineering. The model has been applied to reform initiatives affecting all engineering programs at a university, and as a template for national initiatives and evaluation schemes. The number of universities has now expanded to more than 22 universities in 12 countries on nearly every continent. Development is underway at universities characterized as research-intensive or teaching-focused; large or small; private or public; or historically focused on minority and underrepresented populations. Regional CDIO Centers in North America, the Nordic countries, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and Southern Africa, have been established to provide opportunities for the exchange of ideas and support for implementation in local regions. A number of vehicles, tools, and forums for disseminating and developing the CDIO approach have been created, including the website and the annual international conferences.
Pp. 119-135