CS 376 — Human-Computer Interaction Research Fall 2016
This course is a broad graduate-level introduction to HCI research. It begins with seminal work on interactive systems, and moves through current and future research in interaction techniques, and the design, prototyping, and evaluation of user interfaces.
This is a 4-unit course. For undergraduates or masters students in CS or SymSys, earning an A- or better in CS147 or CS247 is a prerequisite. All graduate and PhD students from other departments are welcome. Graduate students with a unit cap may enroll for 3 units; the workload is the same. Students registered for the class will receive a letter grade — the "credit/no credit" option is not available.
Students in this course are encouraged to attend CS547, the HCI seminar; Fridays 12:50 - 2:05pm.
Syllabus
Topics include ubiquitous computing, social computing, design tools, input technology, design methods, programming user interfaces, crowdsourcing, visualization, creativity tools, research methods, and statistics for HCI.
Requirements
The course comprises two pieces: reading and discussing research papers, and a quarter-long research project.
Schedule
Monday and Wednesday, 3:30pm to 5:20pmLittlefield 107
Course Staff
-
Michael Bernstein
Office Hours: Th 4:30-6pm, Gates 384 -
Rob Semmens (TA)
Office Hours: MW 5:20-6:20pm, Gates 3B -
Kesler Tanner (TA)
Office Hours: T 12:00-2:00pm, Gates 377