26 abril 2010

Curs virtual “Usabilitat i experiència d’ús en llocs web”. Maig-Juny 2010

Vols fer una web? Vols avaluar el teu lloc web? Un requeriment previ és que aquesta web sigui usable, és a dir que sigui fàcil d’usar per la gent que la visita, i com ho podeu fer? T’ho ensenyarem al curs virtual del COBDC “Usabilitat i experiència d’ús en llocs web” que comença el proper 26 de maig.

Aquest curs t’ofereix una guia per a la creació, disseny i avaluació de llocs web. Aspectes com l’anàlisi de requeriments i l’arquitectura de la informació t’ajudaran a fer un disseny i gestió del contingut web més accessible.

Més informació a:
http://www.cobdc.org/cursos/2010/curs2510.html

13 abril 2010

IDC2010. The 9th International Conference on Interaction Design and Children (June 9-12, Barcelona)

IDC2010. The 9th International Conference on Interaction Design and Children www.iua.upf.edu/idc2010/ (In cooperation with ACM SIGCHI)

Universitat Pompeu Fabra. BARCELONA, Spain. June 9-12, 2010

REGISTRATION FEES
Available at:
http://congresos.ultramarexpressevents.com/congress/en/idc-2010/programa-social/


CONFERENCE OVERVIEW

This conference builds on the successes and high standards of the
previous IDC conferences (IDC2009 in Como, Italy; IDC2008 in Chicago,
USA; IDC2007 in Aalborg, Denmark; IDC2006 in Tampere, Finland; IDC2005
in Boulder, USA; IDC2004 in Maryland, USA; IDC2003 in Preston, UK; and
IDC2002 in Eindhoven, the Netherlands).

Interaction is already an inherent part of the contemporary culture of
the current generation of children. They do not see interaction as
something unusual or special; instead, they have seamlessly incorporated
it into their daily lives. As a result, they have “raised the bar” for
our community.. We must therefore address their needs and provide solid
solutions through proposals that go beyond what children nowadays see as
"normal" or "habitual."

IDC2010 will continue IDC's tradition of better understanding the needs
of children and youngsters in relationship to technology, exploring how
to create interactive products for and with them, and investigating how
technology-mediated experiences affect their lives. IDC2010 will present
and discuss the most innovative contributions to research, development,
and practice in these areas, gathering the leading minds in the field.
As in previous years, IDC2010 would like to invite researchers to
address a wide spectrum of technology for young people, from computers,
to mobile phones, to any form of "intelligent" interactive devices
and/or environments, and to consider the requirements of different
profiles, in terms of age (from very young children to adolescents) and
of psychological, social, or physical needs. In addition, IDC2010 would
like to foster an investigation of technological and methodological
issues related not only to learning and play, but also to social
awareness of young people in relationship to environment, cultural
heritage, cultural roots of minorities, local identity vs. wider
community identity, etc. Finally, IDC2010 would like to explore
interaction design for young people in the family context and from an
adult’s perspective, e.g., how to help parents understand and master the
complexity of a world in which technology is more and more part of their
children's life.


PROGRAM

IDC2010 will include full-day and half-day workshops, an invited
keynote, papers sessions, a posters session, a special demo session and
a doctoral consortium.
Social events will complement the scientific program and will be a
chance for participants to meet, discuss and network in the context of a
gorgeous informal setting, and build future collaborations.

KEYNOTE

"The Magic of Interactive Experiences for Children: The Walt Disney
Imagineering Approach"
Dr. Mark Mine, Director of the Creative Technology Group, Walt Disney
Imagineering

SUBMISSIONS

Submissions of short papers, and demos are invited on all topics from
the domain of interaction design for children, including, but not
limited to:

• Methods, techniques, and guidelines for requirements analysis, design,
and evaluation of interactive systems for "children as a diverse group"
(young people of different gender and age, with special needs, from
different cultures or ethnic groups).
• Emerging or new technologies for children (e.g. innovative educational
simulations, interactive games, mobile communications devices, embedded
technologies, robots, accessible fabrication devices, "smart" materials,
authoring/programming tools, interactive playgrounds, intelligent
environments).
• The impact that such technologies can have on children's lives.
• Ethnographic and case studies of children's use of interactive systems
in schools, at home, in hospitals, in public spaces.
• Usability, enjoyability, accessibility, and safety issues, with
particular reference to children.
• Novel theoretical models of interaction with special relevance to
children.
• Design for children's civic involvement, democracy, physical and
emotional well-being, and social awareness of environmental, ethical,
ethnographic or cultural issues.
• Interactive technology for children from an adult's perspective.

All accepted full papers, short papers, and demos will be presented at
the IDC2010 conference, and will appear in the IDC2010 Proceedings.
The extended abstracts of accepted workshops, and a selection of the
best position papers submitted for workshops, will be also included in
the conference proceedings.

For submission instructions please visit www.iua.upf.edu/idc2010/


ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Conference co-Chairs
* Narcís Parés, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona
* Miquel Oliver, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona

Papers co-Chairs
* Janet Read, U. of Lancashire, UK
* Tom Moher, U. of Illinois in Chicago, USA

Short Papers (Posters) co-Chairs
* Maria Roussou, makebelieve design & consulting, Greece
* Susanne Seitinger, Smart Cities/MIT Media Laboratory, USA

Demos co-Chairs
* Paul Marshall, The Open University, UK
* Sergi Jordà, Music Technology Group, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona

Workshops co-Chairs
* Mari Carmen Marcos, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona
* Svetlana Yarosh, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA

Doctoral Consortium
* Edith Ackermann, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
* Michael Eisenberg, University of Colorado at Boulder USA