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Call for Papers: CHI (Computer-Human Interaction) 1992

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Beth Adelson

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Jul 15, 1991, 8:00:55 PM7/15/91
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CHI'92
"Striking a Balance"

1992 ACM Conference on Human Factors and Computer Systems

The annual CHI conference is the leading forum for the exchange of
information on all aspects of human-computer interaction (HCI). The
HCI community is made up of researchers, developers, and practitioners
with diverse backgrounds in areas such as computer science, social science,
and design. The CHI'92 theme, "Striking a Balance", celebrates this
diversity by balancing the needs of each of its constituent groups, and
enabling participants to explore all facets of human-computer interaction.
The HCI community is also diverse in the varieties of human-computer
interfaces we design, in the users we are designing interfaces for,
and in the issues and concerns we focus on in our work.

We invite original submissions on work from all areas of human-computer
interaction, in a variety of paricipation stypes: Demonstrations, Papers,
Panels, Interactive Posters, Short Talks, Videos, Laboratory Overviews,
Interactive Experience, Tutorials, Workshops, Special Interest Groups, and
Doctoral Consortium.

We especially encourage submissions from practitioners and designers
describing the use of methodologies and techniques for the design,
implementation, or evaluation of user interfaces in actual projects
or applications.

The CHI'92 conference also offers unique opportunities for Student
Volunteers, International Participation, Exhibitors, and Corporate
Sponsors.


PAPERS

Papers are presented in a 20-minute lecture-style format. Papers may be of
two distinct types:

Practice and experience papers present the results of using or developing
designs, techniques, tools, practices, methodologies, or organizational
structures outside a controlled laboratory or research context. Papers
in this area should present a clear description of the application or
application domain understandable by the general HCI audience, draw clear
conclusions, and describe areas where further research or innovation is
needed.

Theory, methodology, and concepts papers present new theories, experimental
results, methodologies, tools, prototype systems, or design concepts from
controlled research or laboratory contexts. Papers in this area should
make clear the ways in which their findings differ from what was known or
done previously and describe the significance of these differences.

Papers of both types will be evaluated on the basis of originality,
significance of their contribution to the field, quality of the written
presentation, and adequate citation of relevant literature. They will
be reviewed by three experts in the appropriate topic area, then further
evaluated by the Papers Committee. All accepted papers will be published
in the proceedings.

Specific submission requirements:
Add to the standard cover sheet:
o Paper category: Practice and Experience; or
Theory, Methodology, and Concepts.
o A 100-word abstract.
o The number of color plates needed for publication.
An 8-page paper formatted in the CHI Conference Proceedings Format.

Papers up to 12 pages will be considered if the additional
pages markedly improve the clarity of the presentation. Papers
containing unnecessary material will be rejected for that reason.
Papers MUST conform to the Standard Submission Format to be reviewed.

Submission Deadline: September 27, 1991

Address submissions and questions to:
Ruven Brooks, CHI'92 Papers Chair
CHI'92 Papers
8311 North FM 620
Austin, TX 78726
E-Mail: chi92-pa...@xerox.com

PANELS

Panels typically involve four or five speakers making brief position
statements, followed by extended discussion. (Other innovative formats
are encouraged.) Successful panels rely on the knowledge, informed
opinions, and skill of the presenters. Informal proposals of timely
panel ideas may be entered no later than August 30. The Panels Committee
will then work with submitters to develop a full proposal. These will be
evaluated on the significance of the issues and the prospect for lively,
informed discussion. Abstracts will appear in the proceedings.

Specific submission requirements:
The standard cover sheet.
A two-page proposal containing:
o Issues to be addressed, and their importance to the CHI
community.
o The format of the session.
o Brief summaries of the panelists' backgrounds and their
position statements.

All panelists listed in the proposal must have committed to participate.

Submission Deadlines:

August 30, 1991: Preliminary panel concepts to be developed with the help of
the Panels Committee.

September 27, 1991: Full Proposals.

Address submissions and questions to:
Stephanie Doane, CHI'92 Panels Chair
University of Colorado
Institute of Cognitive Science
Campus Box 345
Regent and Colorado Avenues
Boulder, CO 80309-0345
E-Mail: doan...@xerox.com

INTERACTIVE POSTERS

Interactive poster sessions provide a forum for one-on-one and small group
interaction about specific work. Acceptable posters have visual impact
and the ability to stimulate interaction among attendees. We especially
invite work by students, work of a specialized nature, work concerning
new methods or processes, controversial topics, and work in progress.

Presenters are provided display space and are required to be available at
their poster during designated times (about 4 hours). Abstracts of
accepted posters will be distributed at the conference.

Specific submission requirements:
Add to the standard cover sheet:
o A description of how the work will encourage interaction.
o Preliminary graphic layout of the poster.
A one-page abstract (for distribution) containing:
o The author's name(s), affiliation, address (physical and
electronic), and telephone numbers.
o A description of the work, including a title, formatted in the
CHI Conference Proceedings Format.

Submission Deadline: January 15, 1992

Address submissions and questions to:
Dennis Wixon, CHI'92 Posters Chair
Digital Equipment Corporation
110 Spit Brook Rd. (ZK02-1/N42)
Nashua, NH 03062-2698
E-Mail: wixo...@xerox.com


SHORT TALKS

A short talk is a brief presentation of late-breaking results or
work in progress. Acceptance is based on the same quality criteria as
papers. Short talks differ from papers in two ways: the results discussed
must be recent (occurring after the paper submission), and the work
must be presented in 10 minutes, including questions. A clear and limited
focus is essential.

Specific submission requirements:
The standard cover sheet.

A two-page proposal containing:
o The author's name(s), affiliation, address (physical and
electronic), and telephone numbers.
o A 100-word abstract in the CHI Conference Proceedings Format
for distribution at the conference.
o A description of the work.

Submission Deadline: January 15, 1992

Address submissions and questions to:
Dennis Wixon, CHI'92 Short Talks Chair
Digital Equipment Corporation
110 Spit Brook Rd. (ZK02-1/N42)
Nashua, NH 03062-2698
E-Mail: wixo...@xerox.com
VIDEOA

CHI'92 video submissions may be of two distinct types:

"Standard videos" address innovative interactive techniques, user
interface ideas, novel interfaces, as well as other topics relevant
to the conference. These videos wil be evaluated on the basis of
their relevance, technical content, originality, presentation quality,
and clarity. Abstracts of accepted submissions will be published
in the conference proceedings.

"Future scenario videos" will be shown in a special program. These videos
envision human-computer interaction five to ten years or more in the future.
Videos in this category will be evaluated on their creativity, interest
to the CHI audience, presentation quality, originality, and
credibility. Videos shown previously at CHI or other conferences are
eligible as future scenario submissions.

Specific submission requirements:
Add to the standard cover sheet:
o A statement categorizing the submission as a standard or
a scenario video video.
For standard videos, include a proposal containing:
o A two-page description of the work shown in the video, formatted in
the CHI Conference Proceedings Format.
o Any relevant references or figures.
For scenario videos include:
o A 100 word abstract describing the work.
Guidelines for the tapes:
o Any format accepted (NTSC prefered).
o Videos must be less than 15 minutes
(10 minutes preferred).

Submission Deadlines:
September 27, 1991: Standard video submissions.
January 15, 1992: Future scenarios video submissions.

Address submissions and questions to:
Brad A. Myers, CHI'92 Videos Chair
School of Computer Science
Carnegie-Mellon University
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890
E-Mail: myer...@xerox.com

DEMONSTRATIONS

Demonstrations enable conference attendees to view systems in action,
as well as discuss the systems with the people who created them.
Proposals will be evaluated on the basis of their potential as
demonstrations and for bringing new and exciting ideas to the conference.
Commercial products are eligible, but sales and marketing activities
are not appropriate. Abstracts for accepted demonstrations will appear
in the proceedings.

Specific submission requirements:
Add to the standard cover sheet:
o Computer support requirements.
A proposal containing:
o A brief summary of the demonstration and a statement of
why a demonstration is the best way to present the work.
o The relevance of the work to the CHI community,
emphasizing its novelty and uniqueness.
o The commercial status of the technology.
o The presenter (developer, designer, marketer, etc.).

Submission Deadline: September 27, 1991

Address submissions and questions to:
Joseph W. Sullivan, CHI'92 Demonstrations Chair
Lockheed Artificial Intelligence Center
1801 Page Mill Road, Bldg F
Palo Alto, CA 94304
E-Mail: sulliv...@xerox.com

LABORATORY OVERVIEWS

Laboratory overviews are 30-minute presentations of work from university,
corporate, or government laboratories with significant concentrations of
work in HCI. Overviews of large projects that lose focus when presented
as panels or papers will also be considered. "Virtual laboratories" --
major, defined collaborative projects not tied to a single geographic or
organizational location -- may also qualify. The review should be
presented by a senior member of the laboratory and should include a sketch
of the themes, methods, or special approaches underlying the spirit of
the lab, and a sample of the laboratory's projects and activities.
A two-page abstract of accepted submission will appear in the proceedings.

Specific submission requirements:
The standard cover sheet.
A two-page proposal containing:
o The mission, themes, and a brief history of the laboratory.
o The number and background of the members (collaborative projects should
list constituent laboratories and individuals working on the
project).
o The kind of work (research, development, etc.).
o A description of a sample of the work (several short descriptions of
projects).
o A list of key publications, products, or other results of the
laboratory.

Submission Deadline: September 27, 1991

Address submissions and questions to:
Jakob Nielsen, CHI'92 Laboratory Overviews Chair
Bellcore, Room MRE 2P-370
445 South Street
Morristown, NJ 07962-1910
E-Mail: niels...@xerox.com

INTERACTIVE EXPERIENCE

The Interactive Experience enables attendees to personally experience works
best understood through hands-on interaction. The submission should be
understandable, usable, self-running, and of interest to attendees.
Submissions of a purely artistic nature are acceptable as well as
submissions demonstrating the use of computers to enhance the quality of
life.

Specific submission requirements:
Add to the standard cover sheet:
o Space, logistics, and other support requirements.
A proposal containing:
o A clear statement of the work including purpose and relevance
to the conference attendees, the HCI community, and the
proposed users.

Note: Proposals may include videotape or other media that best
represent the work.

Submission Deadline: January 15, 1992

Address submissions and questions to:
Alan Wexelblat, CHI'92 Interactive Experience Chair
Bull Worldwide Information Systems
MS MA30-806A
300 Concord Road
Billerica MA 01821
wexelb...@xerox.com

TUTORIALS

Tutorials are designed specifically for novice, intermediate, or
experienced participants, and should help participants develop
an understanding of new concepts and relationships, or teach useful
skills. We invite submissions from practitioners, researchers and
educators interested in sharing their expertise. Submissions will
be evaluated on the basis of the topic's current relevance,
importance, and suitability for presentation in a tutorial
format; expertise of the instructors and their and past performance;
and the fit in the overall balance of the tutorial program.
Tutorial instructors are eligible for some reimbursement of
expenses and a modest honorarium.

Specific submission requirements:
Add to the standard cover sheet:
o A/V requirements.
o Computer support requirements.
A proposal containing:
o Four short paragraphs addressed to attendees, stating:
1. The objectives of the tutorial, the
style of presentation (lecture, participatory, etc.),
and the duration (half day or full day).
2. The content of the course.
3. The intended audience and level of the tutorial.
4. The background of each instructor.
o A description of the tutorial content in the form of a 2-4 page
topical outline that includes an indication of the time
allotments for major course topics.
o Any restrictions or conditions on offering the tutorial,
and a description of anticipated requirements for supplies.
o Any other information you feel will assist the review
committee in making a decision.

Submission Deadline: July 31, 1991

Address submissions and questions to:
Tom Hewett, CHI'92 Tutorials Chair
Department of Psychology, Sociology, and Anthropology
Drexel University
Philadelphia, PA 19104
E-Mail: hewet...@xerox.com

WORKSHOPS

CHI'92 workshops are a forum for participants with different perspectives to
exchange ideas on a specific topic. Groups meet prior to the formal
conference for a one or two-day intense discussion of issues in either
research and applied areas. Organizers select participants from respondents
to a call for participation published in the SIGCHI Bulletin. After each
workshop, the organizer will provide an article summarizing the workshop for
publication in the SIGCHI Bulletin. Proposals will be evaluated on the
basis of their relevance and their potential for generating useful results.

Specific submission requirements:
The standard cover sheet.
A three page proposal containing:
o An outline of the theme and goals of the workshop and its relevance
to the field.
o A description of the planned activities for the workshop, including
length of time, number of planned participants, selection process,
workshop agenda, and pre-workshop activities.
o A brief description of each organizer's background, including
relevant past experience with workshops.

Submission Deadline: September 27, 1991

Address submissions and questions to:
John Karat, CHI'92 Workshops Chair
IBM Watson Research Center
30 Saw Mill River Road
Hawthorne, NY 10532
E-Mail: kara...@xerox.com

SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS (SIGs)

SIGs enable groups sharing an interest to meet informally for an hour
or two to discuss areas of common concern. CHI'92 can provide meeting
facilities and will advertise SIG meetings to the rest of the conference.
Proposals will be accepted until the conference dates on a space-available
basis. Proposals received prior to January 15, 1992 will be advertised
in the final conference program; later proposals will be announced at
the conference.

Specific submission requirements:
The standard cover sheet.
A one-page proposal containing:
o A one-paragraph description of the topic.
o Names of any planned participants.

Submission Deadline: January 15, 1992 (for announcement to appear in
final conference program)

Address submissions and questions to:
John Karat, CHI'92 SIGs Chair
IBM Watson Research Center
30 Saw Mill River Road
Hawthorne, NY 10532
E-Mail: kara...@xerox.com

DOCTORAL CONSORTIUM

Ph.D. students who have finished their dissertation proposals may
apply to participate in the doctoral consortium. Selected students will
have the opportunity to present their research in a small, closed session.
The ensuing discussion and comments will be guided by scholars and
researchers in the field. Applications will be evaluated on the
significance, originality, and progress of the work. Participants
receive conference registration and partial travel reimbursement.

Submission Deadlines:
August 30, 1991: application requests.
October 28, 1991: completed applications.

Note: E-mail messages must include "CHI'92 Doctoral Consortium Request"
in the subject line.

Address questions and requests for applications to:
James Foley, CHI'92 Doctoral Consortium Chair
College of Computing, Rm 241
801 Atlantic Drive
Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, GA 30332-0280
E-Mail: fole...@xerox.com


General Instructions for Authors: ALL SUBMISSIONS AND PROPOSALS

NOTE: Before preparing your submission, you are strongly encouraged to obtain
the "CHI'92 Guide to Successful Submissions" for your submission category
(e.g. paper, tutorial, etc.) from:

CHI'92 Guide to Successful Submissions
P.O. Box 1279
Pacifica, CA 94044
Tel: (415) 738-1200
Fax: (415) 738-1280
E-Mail: chi92-g...@xerox.com

Standard Cover Sheet
A standard cover sheet is required for all submissions. It must contain:
Title.
Name, affiliation, addresses (physical and electronic), and
telephone of all authors.
Name of primary contact person.
One topic area from the topic selection list which best describes
the submission.
List of indexing keywords, to aid attendees. Use Computing Reviews
Classification System terms, if possible.
Submission-specific requirements (see Specific Submission
Requirements for each category).

CHI Conference Proceedings Format:
Title area: 1 column, 5.9 cm length, full width of the paper.
Text: 2 columns, column length 23.2 to 24 cm, column width 8.5 cm.
Paper: A4 or 8.5" x 11".
Font: 10 point font set on an 11 point line, Times Roman or
closest available font.
Figures: placed in text, may extend across both columns.
Language: English

Submit six copies of all submission material, including cover sheet.
(Exception: video submissions require only one copy of the tape.)

Submissions not conforming to these general instructions plus the
specific submission category guidelines will not be considered.

No fax or electronic mail submissions will be accepted. Submissions may
not contain proprietary or confidential material.

TOPIC SELECTION LIST

Analysis and Evaluation Techniques
Methods for analyzing and evaluating the effectiveness of designs and
implemented systems.

Application-Specific Designs
Interfaces for specific application areas, in
which the domain places significant constraints on the design or
implementation of the interface.

Design Processes
Explorations of the design process, techniques for capturing
designs, and methodologies for producing good designs.

Development Tools and Methods
Toolkits and interactive systems for constructing interfaces.

Group Work
Explorations of people using computers to work together, and systems
for enhancing group work.

Interaction Technology and Techniques
New input/output devices and techniques, and exploration of existing devices
and techniques.

Interface Components and Designs
Exploration of interaction styles, metaphors, and graphic elements which
support the interface.

Legal and Standards Issues
Patent and copyright issues, proposed standards for user interaction,
and evaluations of existing standards.

Models of the User
Models of user learning and user performance, mental models of system
behavior, and studies of how these models can be used improve interfaces.

Organizational Context
Understanding how HCI design and implementation fits into the organizations
that use and develop interfaces.

Other Areas
Additional topics of relevance to the HCI community.


CALL FOR STUDENT VOLUNTEERS

Graduate and undergraduate students are invited to participate
actively in the CHI'92 conference. Student volunteers receive
complimentary registration, reduced-rate housing, and the opportunity to
interact with members of the HCI community in return for helping with
day-to-day operations of the conference.

For questions about the Student Volunteer Program, or to apply as a Student
Volunteer, contact:

Jarrett Rosenberg, CHI'92 Student Volunteer Chair
Sun Microsystems
2550 Garcia Avenue, MTV 1-07
Mountain View, CA 94043-1100
E-Mail: rosenb...@xerox.com
INTERNATIONAL PARTICIPATION

CHI'92 encourages the participation of international members of the
human-computer interaction community. For information on conference
attendance and participation, please contact either Carol Klyver, CHI'92
Executive Administrator, or:

Michael Tauber, European Coordinator
University Paderborn, FB 17
Warburgerstrasse 100
D-4790 Paderborn
Germany
taube...@xerox.com
Fax: +49-5251-60-3836

Gen Suzuki, Pacific Rim Coordinator
NTT Human Interface Laboratories
1-2356 Take, Yokosuka-Shi
Kanagawa, 238-03
Japan
suzuk...@xerox.com
Fax: +81-468-59-2332

CALL FOR EXHIBITORS

CHI'92 provides a unique marketing opportunity to present your products to
important potential customers. We invite applications for exhibitions of
commercial interactive systems, user interfaces, design aids, new
interaction devices, user interface management systems, user interface
toolkits, and literature. We encourage you to have technical
representatives in attendance.

Booths will be assigned on a first-come first-served basis. Theater setting
or hospitality suite exhibitions may also be arranged.

Exhibitors confirmed before October 28, 1991 will be announced in the advance
program. For a packet of information detailing fees, requirements, past
attendance demographics, and other information, write to:

Carol Klyver, CHI'92 Executive Administrator
P.O. Box 1279
Pacifica, CA 94044
Fax: (415) 738-1280
E-Mail: chi92-exh...@xerox.com

CALL FOR CORPORATE SPONSORS

We invite interested organizations to sponsor events at CHI'92.
CHI'92 is a non-profit organization and corporate sponsorship allows the
conference to keep registration costs at a minimum. Sponsoring
organizations are recognized during the conference as well as in the final
program.

Interested organizations should contact:

Scooter Morris, CHI'92 Co-Chair
Genentech, Inc.
460 Pt. San Bruno Blvd.
South San Francisco, CA 94080
E-Mail: morri...@xerox.com

CONFERENCE COMMITTEE

Conference Co-Chairs:
James R. Miller, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories
John "Scooter" Morris, Genentech, Inc.
Advisor:
Don Patterson, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories
Audio/Visual:
Kevin Schofield, Microsoft
Computing Support:
Charlotte Allen, IDE
European Coordinator:
Michael Tauber, University of Paderborn
Executive Administrator:
Carol Klyver, Foundations of Excellence
Graphics:
Carol Morita, Genentech, Inc.
Industry Liaison/Local Showcase:
Charles Granthem, University of San Francisco
Interactive Experience:
Alan Wexelblat, Bull Worldwide Information Systems
Local Arrangements:
Michael Zyda, Naval Postgraduate School
Merchandising:
Dan Norton-Middaugh
Pacific Rim Coordinator:
Gen Suzuki, NTT
Publications:
Bruce "Tog" Tognazzini, Apple Computer
Penny Bauersfeld, Apple Computer
Publicity:
Beth Adelson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Rosemary Wick, Center for Economic Conversion
Registration:
Steve Anderson, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories
Student Volunteers:
Jarrett Rosenberg, Sun Microsystems
Technical Program:
Gene Lynch, Tektronix, Inc.
John Bennett, IBM Almaden Research Center
Demonstrations:
Joseph Sullivan, Lockheed Artificial Intelligence Center
Doctoral Consortium:
James Foley, Georgia Institute of Technology
Laboratory Overviews:
Jakob Nielsen, Bellcore
Panels:
Stephanie Doane, University of Colorado
Papers:
Ruven Brooks, Schlumberger Laboratory for Computer Science
Posters:
Dennis Wixon, Digital Equipment Corporation
Short Talks:
Dennis Wixon, Digital Equipment Corporation
SIGs:
John Karat, IBM Watson Research Center
Videos:
Brad Myers, Carnegie-Mellon University
Workshops:
John Karat, IBM Watson Research Center
Treasurer:
David Mischel, Genentech, Inc.
Tutorials:
Tom Hewett, Drexel University
ACM Liaison:
Diane Darrow, ACM
SIGGRAPH Liaison:
Branko Gerovac, Digital Equipment Corporation
Associate Chairs for Papers Reviews

Analysis and Evaluation Techniques
Robin Jeffries, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories

Application-Specific Designs
John Gould, IBM Watson Research Center

Design Processes
John Carroll, IBM Watson Research Center

Development Tools and Methods
Dan Olsen, Brigham Young University

Group Work
Judy Olson, University of Michigan

Interaction Techniques and Technology
Robert K. Jacob, Naval Research Laboratories

Interface Components and Designs
Sylvia Sheppard, NASA Goddard

Legal and Standards Issues
Pamela Samuelson, University of Pittsburgh School of Law

Models of the User
Peter Polson, University of Colorado

Organizational Context
Susan Dray, IDS Financial Services

Other
Bill Curtis, Software Engineering Institute

Special Advocate for Practice and Experience Papers
Clayton Lewis, University of Colorado


COOPERATING SOCIETIES

CHI'92 is sponsored by the Association for Computing Machinery/Special
Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction (SIGCHI). Cooperating societies
for the 1992 conference are:

ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics (SIGGRAPH)

ACM Special Interest Group on Computers and the Physically Handicapped (SIGCAPH)

ACM Special Interest Group on Office Information Systems (SIGOIS)

Austrian Computer Society (OCG)

Cognitive Science Society

Committee for Human Interface, The Society of Instrument and Control
Engineers (SICE-HI)

The Division of Applied Experimental and Engineering Psychologists
of the American Psychological Association (Div. 21 of APA)

Dutch Computer Society (NGI)

European Association of Cognitive Ergonomics (EACE)

German Society for Information Technology, SIG Software Ergonomy (German
Soc. IT)

Human Computer Interaction Specialists Group of the British Computer Society
(BCS-HI)

Human Factors Society (HFS)

Human Factors Society, European Chapter (HFS, Euro. Chapter)

IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Computer and Display Ergonomics
(IEEE-CS/CDE)

International Network of the IUPsyS on Man-Computer Interaction Research
(MACINTER)

Italian Association for Artificial Intelligence

Software Psychology Society

ACM/SIGCHI

Founded in 1947, the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) is the
largest and oldest educational and scientific computer organization in
the industry today. ACM's name reflects the concerns of its founders
(i.e. machinery), but ACM's vitality stems from its members - their
ideas and experiences. ACM is a society of individuals, a living
vehicle for the continuity of professional standards and traditions.
>From a dedicated group of 78, ACM is now 77,000 strong, with 33 Special
Interest Groups (SIGs), including SIGCHI (Special Interest Group for
Computer-Human Interaction), and more than 600 chapters and
student chapters.

The scope of SIGCHI consists of the study of the human-computer
interaction process and includes research and development efforts leading
to the design and evaluation of user interfaces. The focus of SIGCHI is
on how people communicate and interact with computer systems. SIGCHI
serves as a forum for the exchange of ideas among computer scientists,
human factors scientists, psychologists, social scientists, systems
designers and end users. Over 5,000 professionals work together toward
common goals and objectives.

Membership applications for ACM/SIGCHI can be obtained by contacting the
ACM Headquarters via electronic mail at ACM...@ACMVM.bitnet or by calling
(212) 869-7440 and asking for "Membership Services".


--
Beth Adelson

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