Table of Contents


Advanced Topics in Human-Computer Interaction


Course overview

This course of Advanced Topics in HCI includes discussions about a set of representative papers published in the field of HCI, and creation and demonstration of interactive systems. Students lead their own capstone projects where they build interactive systems and present their demonstrations at the last class.

This course is double-listed as “3747-108: Advanced Topics in HCI” in Graduate School of Engineering and “4915100: Human Interfaces” in Interfaculty Initiative in Information Studies, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Information Studies. Students are allowed to register only to either of these two courses. Everything besides a course name is the same, so no worries about which one you should register. :)

この講義は工学系では「3747-108: ヒューマンコンピュータインタラクション特論」,情報学環・学際情報学府では「4915100: ヒューマンインタフェース」として提供されています.学生はどちらかの講義にしか登録できません.講義の名前以外はすべて同じですので,どちらかで登録していただければ結構です.:)


Room92B on the ninth floor in Eng. Bld. 2
Time Mondays (not Thursdays), 10:25-12:10 (including a short break)
InstructorKoji Yatani (koji “at-mark” iis-lab.org)



Announcement



Course Design

This course has two major objectives: getting familiarized with classic and recent HCI research that well demonstrates novel interactive systems and applications, and designing an interactive system by conducting brainstorming, qualitative surveys, low-fidelity prototyping, and crafting a research proposal (and creating a prototype). To achieve them, this course offers a mixture of research discussions on HCI papers and capstone projects.



Course Policy


Language

English is the official language in this course though Japanese may be used if necessary. All teaching is done in English at a class. Students are strongly recommended to deliver their presentations and demonstrations in English. You may use Japanese when you have large difficulties in communication, but you must always try your best to speak English.


Prerequisite

We do not have any explicit prerequisite for this course, but students are expected to have:

But, the most important is, of course, your strong passion. :)


Academic Misconduct

We have no tolerance to any type of academic misconducts, such as plagiarism, inappropriate citations, and fabrications. Examples are:

In case serious academic misconducts are found, we give following strong penalties depending on their significance.

Please make sure that your reports and source codes do not cause misunderstandings.


Auditing

Auditing students are welcome to join us. But I strongly recommend you to do a discussion chair even if you are just auditing. Also participate in discussions at the class. Just don't be a free rider. :)



Evaluation

Your performance in this course will be evaluated in the following criteria.

You must both do a discussion chair at least twice and complete your capstone project to get a final mark. Otherwise, your mark will be zero.



Schedule

Class Date Contents
#1 10th, April [Introduction] Course introduction, reading assignment
[Research Discussions] Brainstorming with vision videos
#2 17th, April [Research Discussions] Sensing touch
#3 24st, April [Research Discussions] With my hand, on my body
1st, May (Class cancelled. Work on your reading assignment.)
#4 8th, May [Research Discussions] Crazy visions
#5 15th, May [Research Discussions] Turning reality to surreality
#6 22nd, May [Research Discussions] Feeling your force
#7 29th, May [Research Discussions] Tangibles and beyond
#8 5th, June [Research Discussions] Super DIY
#9 12th, June [Research Discussions] Healthy life
#10 19th, June [Capstone Project] How can we write a good review? / Round table presentations of your ideas
21st, June [Capstone Project] Proposal submission due (at 23:59)
#11 26th, June Work on reviews individually.
#12 3rd, July [Research Discussions] Mobile life
3rd, July [Capstone Project] Reviews due
7th, July [Capstone Project] Meta reviews due
#13 10th, July [Capstone Project] Committee meeting



Reading List

Please submit your paper preference from this page by 12th April.




Research Discussions

In research discussions, we discuss some of recently-published HCI work that demonstrates strong novelty and/or progress in this field. After the first class, please name your preferences in this page.



Vision Videos

In Class #1 , we discuss some vision videos. If you are interested in checking more videos, use the following links to find your favorites.



Capstone Project

A capstone project aims to obtain experience of investigating potential HCI research areas and creating a project proposal. We also go through an entire process of proposal reviews, including, reviewing others' proposals, crafting meta reviews, discussing at a “PC meeting,” and making the final decisions.


(Hypothetical) Background context

We are a research funding agency that runs an annual funding program. In our program, each proposal can ask us for up to 30k USD for one-year project. Thus, our program would not cover a large project that would involve multiple researchers and institutions, but the funding would be enough for researchers to take an initial stab on their creative ideas.

We have had many applications, and made initial screening already. Now all the proposal in our pile will be accepted, but we have to determine which proposals would get full funding due to our limited budget. So, we are conducting a review process to prioritize proposals.


Overall process

The overall process of proposal submission and review will be as follows:


Proposal Submission

Students are asked to submit a research proposal as a capstone project. Your proposal should clearly describe:


Proposal format

A proposal must use an SIGCHI paper format.


Submission

You may submit your proposal through EasyChair (http://easychair.org/). I have already sent you the instruction of how to log in to the system. If you haven't received, please let me know immediately.

Collaboration

You are encouraged to collaborate with your fellow students and team up for capstone projects. However, your team must be up to two people. Marks for the capstone project will be given equally to all team members.


Project examples

Examples of capstone projects are as follows (but not limited to):