Design rationale: the argument behind the artifact
CHI '89 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Getting around the task-artifact cycle: how to make claims and design by scenario
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
Activity theory as a potential framework for human-computer interaction research
Context and consciousness
Communications of the ACM
Computers in Context: The Philosophy and Practice of Systems Design
Computers in Context: The Philosophy and Practice of Systems Design
Designing worth is worth designing
Proceedings of the 4th Nordic conference on Human-computer interaction: changing roles
Thoughtful Interaction Design: A Design Perspective on Information Technology
Thoughtful Interaction Design: A Design Perspective on Information Technology
A human activity approach to user interfaces
Human-Computer Interaction
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
BCS-HCI '07 Proceedings of the 21st British HCI Group Annual Conference on People and Computers: HCI...but not as we know it - Volume 1
Hospital robot at work: something alien or an intelligent colleague?
Proceedings of the ACM 2012 conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Proceedings of the 2012 ACM international conference on Intelligent User Interfaces
Making the office catch up: comparing generation Y interactions at home and work
Proceedings of the Designing Interactive Systems Conference
YPhone: applying generation y interactions into an office context
Proceedings of the 2013 conference on Computer supported cooperative work companion
Designing generation Y interaction by eliciting interaction qualities
Proceedings of the 2013 ACM conference on Pervasive and ubiquitous computing adjunct publication
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This paper reports the results of an action research project investigating the articulation of interaction design qualities for a web portal for urban planning and development. A framework for analyzing interaction design qualities is presented. The framework consists of the practical, the social, the aesthetic, the structural and the ethical quality dimensions, and it was tried out in practice with developers and designers of the portal. This provided experiences used to revise the framework. The results indicate that the framework can be improved by splitting the social quality dimension into a communicational dimension and an organizational dimension. The structural dimension is also renamed to the technical dimension.