Pub. period:2001-2003
Pub. count:4
Number of co-authors:2
Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:
Robert Esser:4Jörn W. Janneck's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:
Robert Esser:4 Computer programs emerge as the outcome of complex human processes of cognition, communication and negotiation, which serve to establish the meaningful embedding of the computer system in its intended use context.
-- Floyd, 1992, p. 24
Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann
Read Steve's chapter !
The Social Design of Technical Systems: Building technologies for communities
by Brian Whitworth and Adnan Ahmad
The Encyclopedia of Human-Computer Interaction, 2nd Ed.
by Mads Soegaard and Rikke Friis Dam
Jin, Yan, Esser, Robert and Janneck, Jörn W. (2003): Analysis-oriented semantics definition of visual languages. In: HCC 2003 - IEEE Symposium on Human Centric Computing Languages and Environments 28-31 October, 2003, Auckland, New Zealand. pp. 189-191.
Jin, Yan, Esser, Robert and Janneck, Jörn W. (2002): Describing the Syntax and Semantics of UML Statecharts in a Heterogeneous Modelling Environment. In: Hegarty, Mary, Meyer, Bernd and Narayanan, N. Hari (eds.) Diagrams 2002 - Diagrammatic Representation and Inference - Second International Conference April 18-20, 2002, Callaway Gardens, GA, USA. pp. 320-334.
Esser, Robert and Janneck, Jörn W. (2001): Moses - a tool suite for visual modeling of discrete-event systems. In: HCC 2001 - IEEE CS International Symposium on Human-Centric Computing Languages and Environments September 5-7, 2001, Stresa, Italy. pp. 272-.
Janneck, Jörn W. and Esser, Robert (2001): A predicate-based approach to defining visual language syntax. In: HCC 2001 - IEEE CS International Symposium on Human-Centric Computing Languages and Environments September 5-7, 2001, Stresa, Italy. pp. 40-47.
Pub. period:2001-2003
Pub. count:4
Number of co-authors:2
Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:
Robert Esser:4Jörn W. Janneck's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:
Robert Esser:4 Computer programs emerge as the outcome of complex human processes of cognition, communication and negotiation, which serve to establish the meaningful embedding of the computer system in its intended use context.
-- Floyd, 1992, p. 24
Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann
Read Steve's chapter !
The Social Design of Technical Systems: Building technologies for communities
by Brian Whitworth and Adnan Ahmad
The Encyclopedia of Human-Computer Interaction, 2nd Ed.
by Mads Soegaard and Rikke Friis Dam