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Video Program
The formal video program is an important part of the technical program.
Assembled from submissions by leading researchers and practitioners around the
world, the formal video program at CHI 96 will be shown continuously throughout
the conference. The program will serve as a showcase of innovative HCI design
methodology and novel interaction techniques that will contain something of
interest for all conference participants.
The formal video program will be shown at two venues:
- Continuous theatrical viewing in the Vancouver Trade and Convention
Centre (conference hours Sunday - Thursday)
- Continuous viewing in hotel rooms where possible (24 hours, Sunday - Thursday)
This year, copies of the formal video program will be available for purchase at
a significantly reduced price. Check the registration form for details.
Copies of the Video Program 
This year, copies of the Formal Video Program are available for purchase at a
significantly reduced price. Check the
Conference Registration Form for details.
In addition to the Formal Video Program below, the tape contains the following
video figures from CHI 96 papers:
- Pavlov: Programming By Stimulus-Response Demonstration
- D. Wolber, Univ. of San Francisco
- Beating the Limitations of Camera-Monitor Mediated Telepresence with Extra Eyes
- K. Yamaashi, Hitachi, J.R. Cooperstock, T. Narine, Univ. of
Toronto, W.Buxton, Alias|Wavefront and Univ. of Toronto
- A Palmtop Display for Dextrous Manipulation with Haptic Sensation
- H. Noma, T. Miyasato, F. Kishino, ATR CSRL
- BrightBoard: A Video-Augmented Environment
- Q. Stafford-Fraser and P. Robinson, Rank Xerox Res.Centre
- Wayfinding Strategies and Behaviors in Large Virtual Worlds
- R. P. Darken, Naval Research Lab., J. L. Sibert, G. Washington Univ.
Informal Videos
Attendees are invited to bring videotapes showing their recent work. These
videos can be left with an attendant for others to view in the Informal Video
room for the duration of the conference. Several viewing stations will be
available in the room, and each one will be set up with a VHS/NTSC video player
and a monitor. At least one station will also play PAL and SECAM videotapes. A
library of past CHI videos will also be available.
Formal Video Program
- Visualization
-
- Dynamic Timelines: Visualizing the History of Photography
- Robin L. Kullberg, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
- Visualizing Large Trees Using the Hyperbolic Browser
- John Lamping and Ramana Rao, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, USA
- The Influence Explorer - a Tool for Design
- Lisa Tweedie, Bob Spence, Huw Dawkes and Hua Su, Imperial College, England
- LifeLines: Visualizing Personal Histories
- Brett Milash, Catherine Plaisant, and Anne Rose, University of Maryland, USA
- Revealing Collection Structures through Information Access Interfaces
- Marti A. Hearst and Jan O. Pedersen, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, USA
- Exploring Information With Visage
- Peter Lucas, MAYA Design Group, Inc., and Steven F. Roth, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
- Design
-
- SILK: Sketching Interfaces Like Krazy
- James Landay, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
- TIME: Three-dimensional Input, Modification and Evaluation
- Marteen Gribnau and Gert Pasman, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands
- NEIMO, a Multiworkstation Usability Lab for Observing and Analyzing Multimodal Interaction
- Joëlle Coutaz, Daniel Selber, Eric Carraux, CLIPS-IMAG, and Nathalie Portolan, CCETT, France
- Light Switch Exploration
- Sam Hecht, IDEO Product Development, USA
- New Paths
-
- Adaptative User Interfaces
- Christophe Ramstein, Jean-francois Arcand, and Martin Deveault, Center for Information Technology Innovation, Canada.
- Temporal Typography: a Proposal to Enrich Written Expression
- Yin Yin Wong, Massachussetts Intitute of Technology, USA
- Lifestreams: an Alternative to the Desktop Metaphor
- Scott Fertig, Eric Freeman, and David Gelernter, Yale University, USA
- Improvisational Animation
- Athomas Goldberg, Jonathon Meyer, and Ken Perlin, New York University, USA
- World-Wide-Web
-
- Browsing Anatomical Image Databases: A Case Study of the Visible Human
- Chris North and Flip Korn, University of Maryland
- The Information Forager
- Stuart K. Card, George G. Robertson, and William York, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, USA
- The DeckScape Web Browser
- Marc H. Brown, Digital Equipment Corporation and Robert A. Shillner, Princeton University, USA
chi96-webmaster@acm.org /
96-02-22