Jeannie Stamberger

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Publications by Jeannie Stamberger (bibliography)

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Yeh, Ron, Liao, Chunyuan, Klemmer, Scott R., Guimbretiere, Francois, Lee, Brian, Kakaradov, Boyko, Stamberger, Jeannie and Paepcke, Andreas (2006): ButterflyNet: a mobile capture and access system for field biology research. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2006 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2006. pp. 571-580. Available online

Through a study of field biology practices, we observed that biology fieldwork generates a wealth of heterogeneous information, requiring substantial labor to coordinate and distill. To manage this data, biologists leverage a diverse set of tools, organizing their effort in paper notebooks. These observations motivated ButterflyNet, a mobile capture and access system that integrates paper notes with digital photographs captured during field research. Through ButterflyNet, the activity of leafing through a notebook expands to browsing all associated digital photos. ButterflyNet also facilitates the transfer of captured content to spreadsheets, enabling biologists to share their work. A first-use study with 14 biologists found this system to offer rich data capture and transformation, in a manner felicitous with current practice.

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Morris, Meredith Ringel, Paepcke, Andreas, Winograd, Terry and Stamberger, Jeannie (2006): TeamTag: exploring centralized versus replicated controls for co-located tabletop groupware. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2006 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2006. pp. 1273-1282. Available online

We explore how the placement of control widgets (such as menus) affects collaboration and usability for co-located tabletop groupware applications. We evaluated two design alternatives: a centralized set of controls shared by all users, and separate per-user controls replicated around the borders of the shared tabletop. We conducted this evaluation in the context of TeamTag, a system for collective annotation of digital photos. Our comparison of the two design alternatives found that users preferred replicated over shared controls. We discuss the cause of this preference, and also present data on the impact of these interface design variants on collaboration, as well as the role that orientation, co-touching, and the use of different regions of the table played in shaping users' behavior and preferences.

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Changes to this page (author)

13 Feb 2010: Enabled abstracts to be shown on Jeannie Stamberger's author page.
19 Jun 2007: Author was edited
19 Jun 2007: Author was added to the bibliography

Publication statistics

Publication period:2006-2006
Publication count:2
Number of co-authors:9



Productive colleagues

Jeannie Stamberger's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Terry Winograd:56
Andreas Paepcke:38
Scott R. Klemmer:26


Collaboration count

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Andreas Paepcke:2
Meredith Ringel Morris:1
Terry Winograd:1

 

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Mar 17

More and more we're being asked to live with technology that is technically reliable, because it was created to fit our knowledge of the physical world, but that is so complex or so counterintuitive that it's actually unusable by most human beings.

-- Kim Vicente, The Human Factor, p. 17.

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