Automating the assignment of submitted manuscripts to reviewers
SIGIR '92 Proceedings of the 15th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
Bead: explorations in information visualization
SIGIR '92 Proceedings of the 15th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
HILITES: the information service for the world HCI community
ACM SIGCHI Bulletin
Improving human-proceedings interaction: indexing the CHI index
CHI '95 Conference Companion on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Teaching user interface development to software engineers
CHI '95 Conference Companion on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Adding imageability features to information displays
Proceedings of the 9th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology
A linear iteration time layout algorithm for visualising high-dimensional data
Proceedings of the 7th conference on Visualization '96
The HCI bibliography: past, present, and future
CHI '94 Conference Companion on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Electronic resources in human-computer interaction
CHI '94 Conference Companion on Human Factors in Computing Systems
interactions
Topic-based browsing within a digital library using keyphrases
Proceedings of the fourth ACM conference on Digital libraries
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
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The HCI Bibliography project has just released its first collections of a free-access online extended bibliography on Human-Computer Interaction. The basic goal of the project is to put an online bibliography for most of HCI on the screens of all researchers and developers in the field through anonymous ftp access, mail servers, and Mac and DOS floppy disks. Through the efforts of volunteers, the bibliography is approaching 1000 entries, with abstracts and/or tables of contents; eventually, citation information and hypertext access will be added. The first release contains the complete contents of all the ACM CHI conference, the complete journal Human-Computer Interaction, and several other important sources. Eventually, all of HCI will be online and freely accessible around the world.