Volume 6,
Number 1,
February 2004
- Patrizia Marti:
On presence.
1-3
- Fatma Nasoz, Kaye Alvarez, Christine L. Lisetti, Neal Finkelstein:
Emotion recognition from physiological signals using wireless sensors for presence technologies.
4-14
- Antonio Camurri, Barbara Mazzarino, Gualtiero Volpe:
Expressive interfaces.
15-22
- Jeremy V. Pitt:
Digital blush: towards shame and embarrassment in multi-agent information trading applications.
23-36
- Luigina Ciolfi:
Understanding spaces as places: extending interaction design paradigms.
37-40
- Claire A. G. J. Huijnen, Wijnand A. IJsselsteijn, Panos Markopoulos, Boris E. R. de Ruyter:
Social presence and group attraction: exploring the effects of awareness systems in the home.
41-44
- Luciano Gamberini, Anna Spagnolli, Paolo Cottone, Massimiliano Martinelli, Laura Bua:
The "presence of others" in a virtual environment: different collaborative modalities with hybrid resources.
45-48
- Stefania Bandini, Sara Manzoni, Fabrizio Nunnari, Carlo Simone:
Supporting the sense of presence in control environments.
49-52
- Corina Sas, Gregory M. P. O'Hare, Ronan G. Reilly:
Presence and task performance: an approach in the light of cognitive style.
53-56
- Rick Kleij, Roos M. Paashuis, J. J. Langefeld, Jan Maarten Schraagen:
Effects of long-term use of video-communication technologies on the conversational process.
57-59
- Loretta Anania:
What do we need presence for?
60-62
Volume 6,
Number 2,
May 2004
- Kenji Itoh, HenningBoje Andersen, Masaki Seki:
Track maintenance train operators' attitudes to job, organisation and management, and their correlation with accident/incident rate.
63-78
- Sidney W. A. Dekker, Erik Hollnagel:
Human factors and folk models.
79-86
- Qiao Liu, Keiichi Nakata, Kazuo Furuta:
Making control systems visible.
87-106
- John C. McCarthy, Peter C. Wright, Michael Cooke:
From information processing to dialogical meaning making: an experiential approach to cognitive ergonomics.
107-116
- Nikos Zarboutis, Nicolas Marmaras:
Searching efficient plans for emergency rescue through simulation: the case of a metro fire.
117-126
Volume 6,
Number 3,
August 2004
- Yan Xiao, Colin F. Mackenzie:
Introduction to the special issue on Video-based research in high risk settings: methodology and experience.
127-130
- Stephanie A. Guerlain, Beth Turrentine, Reid Adams, J. Forrest Calland:
Using video data for the analysis and training of medical personnel.
131-138
- Colin F. Mackenzie, Yan Xiao, Richard Horst:
Video task analysis in high performance teams.
139-147
- E. M. Roth, C. K. Christian, M. Gustafson, Thomas B. Sheridan, K. Dwyer, T. K. Gandhi, M. J. Zinner, M. M. Dierks:
Using field observations as a tool for discovery: analys ing cognitive and collaborative demands in the operating room.
148-157
- Yan Xiao, F. Jacob Seagull, Colin F. Mackenzie, Katherine Klein:
Adaptive leadership in trauma resuscitation teams: a grounded theory approach to video analysis.
158-164
- G. Fletcher, R. Flin, P. McGeorge, R. Glavin, N. Maran, R. Patey:
Rating non-technical skills: developing a behavioural marker system for use in anaesthesia.
165-171
- Penelope Sanderson, Jennifer Crawford, Annyck Savill, Marcus Watson, W. John Russell:
Visual and auditory attention in patient monitoring: a formative analysis.
172-185
- Michael D. McNeese:
How video informs cognitive systems engineering: making experience count.
186-196
- Emily S. Patterson, Michelle L. Rogers, Marta L. Render:
A simulation-based embedded probe technique for human-computer interaction evaluation.
197-205
Volume 6,
Number 4,
November 2004
Copyright © Tue Dec 8 20:24:20 2009
by Michael Ley (ley@uni-trier.de)