IS U570 Human Computer Interaction -- Fall 2004 - General Information
Professor Futrelle -
College of Computer and Information Sciences, Northeastern U., Boston, MA
Version of 12 September 2004
The URL of this page is: http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/futrelle/teaching/isu570f2004/info.html
Course description, from the catalogue:
IS U570 Human Computer Interaction (4 SH)
Studies the principles of human-computer interaction and the
practice of user interface design. Discusses the major human
information processing sub-systems (perception, memory,
attention, and problem-solving), and how the properties of these
systems influence the design of interactive systems. Reviews
guidelines and specification languages for designing user
interfaces, with an emphasis on toolkits of standard
graphical-user-interface objects. Introduces usability metrics
and evaluation methods. Additional topics may include: World Wide
Web design principles and tools; wireless/mobile device
interfaces; computer-supported cooperative-work; information
visualization; virtual reality. Coursework includes designing
user interfaces, creating working prototypes using a GUI toolkit,
and evaluating existing interfaces using the methods studied.
Note the prerequisite: CSU370 (Object-Oriented Design).
- Course Key Number:
- 50503
- Institution:
- Northeastern University, and the
College of Computer and Information Science, Boston, MA.
- Instructor:
- Professor Robert P. Futrelle
Email me at: futrelle@ccs.neu.edu.
You can also use a
web form
to contact me without needing email access at all.
- Futrelle's Office:
- 450 WVH, Lab 460 WVH
- Hardcopy mailbox:
- 202 WVH
- Telephone:
- Futrelle's office: 617-373-4239, Lab: 617-373-4607
- Teaching Assistant:
- Jason Blind
Email: djb@ccs.neu.edu
Office hours: Tuesdays 3:30pm-4:30pm, Thursdays 3pm - 4pm
Room 460WVH
- Textbook:
- Designing the User Interface by Shneiderman and Plaisant,
4th edition (Addison-Wesley, 2005).
- Book on constructing GUIs with Java/Swing:
- This book was developed by Sun and is free online
at this location,
as well as available as a hardcopy
from any bookdealer.
It is The JFC Swing Tutorial: A Guide to Constructing GUIs, 2nd Edition
by Kathy Walrath, et al. Both this book and the textbook are on
reserve in Snell Library. Also see Futrelle's
Swing page.
- Personal Help:
- Futrelle has regularly scheduled office hours,
If you need help at any time, find Futrelle or the TA, or call or send
email, or ask in class to set up an appointment.
- Classes:
- Tuesdays and Fridays, 1:35-3:15 (Seq F), Room 325 SH
- Projects:
- All students will participate in a project team with one or two other students.
See the Projects page for details.
Every student in the course will be programming in Java and Swing as well
as writing substantial reports for project design and results.
- Honors Adjunct:
- There is an Honors Adjunct for this course.
The topics will be an interface for a diagram system
(
see this earlier work in Lisp
or as a more specific example,
this page.)
and/or developing an Eclipse plug-in.
These are not "academic" exercises, but an integral part of
an ongoing basic research program in Professor Futrelle's lab.
- Grading:
- The items below add to 100 points. No score will be dropped
except for valid medical or similar reasons with proper documentation.
- 2 points. Joining the course mailing list by 11:59pm,
Thursday, September 16th, via
this page.
- 5 points. Project #1, initial description.
- 8 points. Quiz #1.
- 8 points. Project #1, completed (total of 13 points for Project #1)
- 18 points. Midterm Exam.
- 8 points. Project #2, initial description.
- 8 points. Quiz #2.
- 17 points. Project #2, completed (total of 25 points for Project #2).
- 26 points. Final Exam.
The pop quizzes are worth 3 points each and can increase your total
points for the course beyond 100, in principle.
- The course email archives:
- All students must sign up for the mailing list (see above)
so you can all get important notices and exchange questions, answers and information.
All mail to the list is archived
https://lists.ccs.neu.edu/pipermail/Isu570-f04-rpf/.
Post away -- your questions and information may well be of interest to other
students in the class.
Post mail to the list from your registered email address
to:
Isu570-f04-rpf@lists.ccs.neu.edu
Three other points about the list:
- You must join the list before you can send mail to it.
- You must post to the list from the email address(es) you're
registered with. Else it will be rejected and not posted.
If you want to do duplicate registration with two email
addresses, you can, and you can adjust your options for either
or both, e.g., no mail from one, but you can post from it,
etc.
- If you reply to list mail, your reply will be sent to the
list, by default. Before you send off your mail you should
change the To: field to someone else, if you don't want it
to go to the list.
- If you reply to a list mail item, it will join a thread
for that item. Merely sending to the list with the same
subject line as another threaded item will not cause it
to be included in that thread. In fact, you can amend or
change the subject line in your reply and your reply
will be added to the thread.
Go to ISU570 home page.
or RPF's Teaching Gateway or
homepage