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Your Title Abstract Abstracts should be about 150 words. State what problem or opportunity you are addressing, and why it needs to be addressed. Introduce what your propject is by name and offer a brief description of it. Briefly describe the process of your design with respect to key research activities/methods uses, and how these impacted the design, including one line about the results of the studies. Perhaps add one line about what didn’t work or fell short in your process. Inidicate what you would do in the future to improve the work. Finally, provide one line about what the contribution is that you have made with this project to a larger audience of deisgners and to society. Author Keywords Authors’ choice; of terms; separated; by semicolons; include commas, within terms only; required. ACM Classification Keywords H.5.2. Information Interfaces and Presentation (e.g. HCI): User Interfaces – Prototyping; User-centered Design. Introduction Your paper is no more than 4 pages excluding references, which can take as many pages as the authors wish. Given that this paper is only four pages, you should be very careful in selecting what is in the paper and what is not in the paper, and you should likewise be very careful about every word. This paper must be publication quality. You must also adhere fully Author assigned the paper Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853, USA [email protected] Second Author Team Member Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853, USA [email protected] Third Author Team Member Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853, USA [email protected] Fourth Author Team Member Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853, USA [email protected] TA’s name Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853, USA TA’s email address Keith Evan Green Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853, USA [email protected] Figure 2: In this image, the cats are tesselated to save space. You, too, can save space by placing images in the sidebar. Images should have captions and be within the boundaries of the text box on Page 2. Photo CC-BY jofish on Flickr. Replace the image above Leave this box here. If you submit your paper and your paper is accepted by the conference for presentation/publication,

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Your Title

AbstractAbstracts should be about 150 words. State what problem or opportunity you are addressing, and why it needs to be addressed. Introduce what your propject is

by name and offer a brief description of it. Briefly describe the process of your design with respect to key research activities/methods uses, and how these impacted the design, including one line about the results of the studies. Perhaps add one line about what didn’t work or fell short in your process. Inidicate what you would do in the future to improve the work. Finally, provide one line about what the contribution is that you have made with this project to a larger audience of deisgners and to society.

Author KeywordsAuthors’ choice; of terms; separated; by semicolons; include commas, within terms only; required.

ACM Classification KeywordsH.5.2. Information Interfaces and Presentation (e.g. HCI): User Interfaces – Prototyping; User-centered Design.

IntroductionYour paper is no more than 4 pages excluding references, which can take as many pages as the authors wish. Given that this paper is only four pages, you should be very careful in selecting what is in the paper and what is not in the paper, and you should likewise be very careful about every word. This paper must be publication quality. You must also adhere fully to the formatting shown in this paper; failing to do so will reduce your grade.

In the introduction, you begin by offering a problem statement (with references)—an identification of what

Author assigned the paperCornell UniversityIthaca, NY 14853, [email protected]

Second Author Team MemberCornell UniversityIthaca, NY 14853, [email protected]

Third Author Team MemberCornell UniversityIthaca, NY 14853, [email protected]

Fourth Author Team MemberCornell UniversityIthaca, NY 14853, [email protected]

TA’s nameCornell UniversityIthaca, NY 14853, USATA’s email address

Keith Evan GreenCornell UniversityIthaca, NY 14853, [email protected]

Figure 2: In this image, the cats are tesselated to save space. You, too, can save space by placing images in the sidebar. Images should have captions and be within the boundaries of the text box on Page 2. Photo CC-BY jofish on Flickr.

Replace the image above with your best “money shot”

Leave this box here. If you submit your paper and your paper is accepted by the conference for presentation/publication,

Page 2: Background - cfacaa.human.cornell.edu docs/SIGCHI Exten…  · Web viewFigure 1: In this image, the cats are tesselated to save space. You, too, can save space by placing images

problem or opportunity are you addressing. Then, as a response to this problem (it’s not yet a “solution”) introduce your prototype by name, pointing to, e.g. (Figure 1). Compare your artifact to other artifacts that are similar or perhaps very different, and include references to these (you should have at least three artifacts by others that you consider in this section. Why is yours better at addressing the problem or opportunity you stated?

DesignWalk us through your design process. Make sure to include your persona (figure 2?) and your scenario. Also describe your early studies: observations, and interviews and perhaps results from a first survey or focus group.

Here is where you present the best of your ideation strategy work and some very early user studies. Show pictures of early prototypes, sketches, diagrams, morphological charts, moodboards – you select which of these make your best case and make most clear your design process. If one or more of the activities in class didn’t do much to inform your design process, then don’t speak of them here. You are the curator.

You can include images in the body of the text using this format…

Figure 3: Insert a caption below each figure.

.. but these images quickly take up space in this short paper. Instead, you should make good use of the text box to the left of each page to include photos, diagrams, tables, …. Make sure to reference in the text body every figure you present (Figure 3).

At the close of this section, include 3-5 bullets of key “design guidelines” that sum up what you artifact needs to be. Here is the format for these bullets:

transFORM should be made weather resistant. transFORM should be mostly brightly colored so its

noticeable after dark. transFORM should be…

This section is approximately a page or more.

EvaluationHere you present the more informative user studies your conducted, their results and their impact on your design. This is the core of the paper; it should be the longest section of the paper. For each evaluation method considered, make certain to show how it impacted your design. You may need to prepare a table to report results. These tables can be in the far left text box or in the text body like below (Table !). Make certain to reference every table in the text body.

A table in the text body looks like this (Table 2):

First

Second

child 22 44

Figure 2: In this image, the cats are tesselated to save space. You, too, can save space by placing images in the sidebar. Images should have captions and be within the boundaries of the text box on Page 2. Photo CC-BY jofish on Flickr.

Replace the image above with your best “money shot”

Figure 2: In this image, the …

Figure 4: In this image, the …

Use the text box on every page for figures and tables.

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First

Second

adult 22 16Gen

e 22 11

Cliff 34 22

Table 2: Participants mostly perceived the prototype as usable (score: 4 of 5) but as a group were not as receptive to the size of the artifact (score: 3 of 5 for the larger size).

Discussion of ResultsSummarize your results, and indicate what they taught you overall in developing your design. This should be a short section but substantive. Future WorkWhat would you do if you have more time or could do something over? This should be one paragraph.ContributionWhat does your design and your process of developing it mean for other designers, and for society. This should be one paragraph but make a big, final point about what you did and what it means.

Notes about references. You should have no fewer than 12 references in your paper. Four or more of these will be references about the problem or opportunity you are addressing; four or more of these will be references about other designed artifacts that are very much like yours or different than yours that you are comparing/contrasting to your design; the remainder of these references might be references to other source material that make your case (e.g. a theoretical paper). As shown below, you must provide a numbered list of references at the end of the paper, ordered

alphabetically by first last name of first author. Format your references like the examples in this document. References found in the ACM Digital Library can be automatically generated within the ACM Digital Library. See http://dl.acm.org and, for the given paper you are referencing, click on the ACM Ref link; then, cut and paste the result and edit to match the examples.

There is typically no page limit for the number of pages your reference fill.

Note that the hyperlink style used throughout this document uses blue links; however, URLs that appear in the references section may appear in black.

References1. @_CHINOSAUR. 2014. VENUE IS TOO COLD.

#BINGO #CHI2016. Tweet. (1 May, 2014). Retrieved February 2, 2014 from https://twitter.com/_CHINOSAUR/status/461864317415989248

2. ACM. How to Classify Works Using ACM’s Computing Classification System. 2014. Retrieved August 22, 2014 from http://www.acm.org/class/how_to_use.html.

3. Ronald E. Anderson. 1992. Social impacts of computing: Codes of professional ethics. Soc Sci Comput Rev 10, 2: 453-469.

4. Anna Cavender, Shari Trewin, Vicki Hanson. 2014. Accessible Writing Guide. Retrieved August 22, 2014 from http://www.sigaccess.org/welcome-to-sigaccess/resources/accessible-writing-guide/

5. Morton L. Heilig. 1962. Sensorama Simulator, U.S. Patent 3,050,870, Filed January 10, 1961, issued August 28, 1962.

6. Jofish Kaye and Paul Dourish. 2014. Special issue Personal Ubiquitous Comput. 18, 4 (April 2014),

First

Second

child 22 44adult 22 16Gen

e 22 11

Cliff 34 22

Table 1: A narrow table in the margin

Figure 4: In this image, the …

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765-766. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00779-014-0773-4

7. Scott R. Klemmer, Michael Thomsen, Ethan Phelps- Where do web sites come from?: capturing and interacting with design history. In Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '02), 1-8. http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/503376.503378

8. Psy. 2012. Gangnam Style. Video. (15 July 2012.). Retrieved August 22, 2014 from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bZkp7q19f0

9. Marilyn Schwartz. 1995. Guidelines for Bias-Free Writing. Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN.

10. Ivan E. Sutherland. 1963. Sketchpad, a Man-Machine Graphical Communication System. Ph.D Dissertation. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA.

11. Langdon Winner. 1999. Do artifacts have politics? In The Social Shaping of Technology (2nd. ed.), Donald MacKenzie and Judy Wajcman (Eds.). Open University Press, Buckingham, UK, 28-40.

Figure 2: In this image, the …

Figure 4: In this image, the …

Use the text box on every page for figures and tables.