The weak science of human-computer interaction
Greenberg, S. and Thimbleby, H. (1992)
The weak science of human-computer interaction. In Proceedings of the CHI '92 Research Symposium on Human Computer Interaction. (Monterey, California),. Also as Report 1991-459-43, December.
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Abstract
This article is about science and the discipline of human-computer interaction (HCI). Science in HCI is merely one component of a wider agenda; alone science is not sufficient for 'good' HCI (whatever that is). We argue that science is necessary, but the way that science is undertaken-or purported to be undertaken-in HCI is inadequate. Failures are due to the sparsity of theories and risky hypotheses, the pragmatic difficulty of substantiating experiments through replication, and the over-generalization of experimental results.
Bibtex entry
@INPROCEEDINGS { 1992-WeakScience.CHISymposium,
CLASS = { SHORT },
AUTHOR = { Greenberg, S. and Thimbleby, H. },
TITLE = { The weak science of human-computer interaction },
BOOKTITLE = { Proceedings of the CHI '92 Research Symposium on Human Computer Interaction },
YEAR = { 1992 },
ADDRESS = { Monterey, California },
NOTE = { Also as Report 1991-459-43, December },
}