CHI '88 INTERACTIVEPOSTER SESSION PAPERSAND ABSTRACTS Interactive Poster Sessions serve as a valuable forum for presenting late-breaking research in computer-human interaction and receiving Jbedback from an interested body of viewers. The poster sessions held at this' year's CHI "88 conference, May 15-19 in Washington, D.C., was no exception. Fifty poster presentations, arranged by five topic areas, were located adjacent to the main conference room. Topic' areas included user models, interface designs, interface analysis, tools and techniques for interface design, and CHI doctoral eonsortium participants. All 50 posters were on display for the duration of the conference, giving presenter and viewer ample time for interaction. In addition, all poster presenters were available for interaction during the catered opening reception held on Monday evening, May 16, when several hundred people filed through the display area to review poster exhibits and talk with the presenters. The poster exhibitors covered a range of topics as well as a range of countries, with Canada, Germany, England, Switzerland, and Japan represented in addition to the United States. Thirty-three of the participants were from universities, and 10 had also participated in the doctoral consortium held in conjunction with the conference. Abstracts submitted for the poster session were reviewed by a panel of judges which included Louis Blazy, U.S. Department of Defense; Fred Davis' Jr., Graduate School of Business Administration, The University of Michigan; Jay Elkerton, Department of lndustrial and Operations Engineering, The University of Michigan; Susan Evans, Vector Research, Inc.; and Fred Schott, Aetna Life Insurance Company. Additional abstracts and papers can bejbund in the July and October 1988 issues of the SIGCHI Bulletin. SUSAN M. EVANS CHI '88 INTERACTIVEPOSTERSESSIONSCHAIR INDEX Development and Evaluation of Direct Manipulation Lists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 Douglas Beck and Jay Elkerton, Center for Ergonomics, The University of Michigan Modeling Human-Computer Decision Making with Covariance Structure Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 Michael D. Coovert and Mary J. LaLomia, University of South Florida; Eduardo Salas, Naval Training Systems Center, Orlando, Fla. Simplified Task Analysis and Design for End-User Computing: Implications for Human/Computer Interface Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 Vitaly J. Dubrovsky, Clarkson University, Potsdam, N.Y. SIGCHI Bulletin January 1989 Volume 20, Number 3
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