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CS547: Human-Computer Interaction Seminar

CS547: Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (2009-2010, Stanford Univ.). Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (Seminar on People, Computers, and Design) is a Stanford University course that features weekly speakers on topics related to human-computer interaction design. The seminar is organized by the Stanford HCI Group, which works across disciplines to understand the intersection between humans and computers. This playlist consists of seminar speakers recorded during the 2009-2010 academic year.

Lecture 05 - Segmenting and Connecting: From Event Perception to Comics

Barbara Tversky discusses how visual narratives use visual devices to form a visual vocabulary by breaking up time and space, showing space and time, and linking time and space.


Go to the Course Home or watch other lectures:

Lecture 01 - Crowdsourcing Work
Lecture 02 - Backtracking Events as Indicators of Software Usability Problems
Lecture 03 - Programming by Sketching
Lecture 04 - Aesthetic Science of Color
Lecture 05 - Segmenting and Connecting: From Event Perception to Comics
Lecture 06 - Why is the Google Book Search Settlement So Controversial?
Lecture 07 - Multi-Sensor HCI for Smart Environments
Lecture 08 - Enabling Practical Ubiquity
Lecture 09 - How Dynamic Content Affects the Way People Find Online
Lecture 10 - Designing a Unified Experience
Lecture 11 - How Prototyping Practices Affect Design Results
Lecture 12 - Following #Twitter
Lecture 13 - The Anti-Ergonomy of Instruments of Interaction
Lecture 14 - Speaking Versus Typing
Lecture 15 - How Multiplayer Games Will Change the Future of Work
Lecture 16 - Driving User Behavior with Game Dynamics
Lecture 17 - Interactive Art and Social Meaning
Lecture 18 - Representing Earth
Lecture 19 - Anthropomorphic Interfaces for the Underserved
Lecture 20 - The Green Machine
Lecture 21
Lecture 22 - Designing Stuff: Lame Gods in the Service of Prosthetic Gods
Lecture 23 - Lifelong Kindergarten: Design, Play, Share, Learn
Lecture 24 - How We Think with Bodies and Things
Lecture 25 - Interdisciplinary Design for Services, Systems, and Beyond
Lecture 26 - Redesigning the Programming Experience