Toward an HCI Research and Practice Agenda :"""°"'°": based on Human Needs and Social Responsibility o~ g Michael J. Muller and Cathleen Wharton oL .CHI97 oo o At CHI 97, thirteen researchers and practitioners met to consider new opportunities in HCI research and practice. Our strategy in considering these new opportunities was simple: Find new Emergent themes One of the workshop organizers has summarized the themes of the workshop as follows. We note that other members of the workshop might have organized the themes in a different way. HCI challenges of both practical and theoretical value through examining unmet human needs and social responsibilities. We believe that these challenges will result in important progress, not only for the human needs in question, but more fundamentally for the fields of HCI. For a fuller development of this strategy, see [1]. In the interests of space, this report of our work will be brief and thematic, rather than detailed and bibliographic. In this short but public report, we call attention to critical questions that we hope other HCI professionals will recognize as significant and rich in possibility for theoretical and methodological progress. Our answers to those questions are too lengthy
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