No description available of Karyn Moffatt...
Moffatt, Karyn (2008): Increasing the accessibility of pen-based technology: an investigation of age-related target acquisition difficulties. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2008 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems April 5-10, 2008. pp. 2625-2628. Available online
Moffatt, Karyn and McGrenere, Joanna (2007): Slipping and drifting: using older users to uncover pen-based target acquisition difficulties. In: Ninth Annual ACM Conference on Assistive Technologies 2007. pp. 11-18. Available online
Boyd-Graber, Jordan L., Nikolova, Sonya S., Moffatt, Karyn, Kin, Kenrick C., Lee, Joshua Y., Mackey, Lester W., Tremaine, Marilyn M. and Klawe, Maria (2006): Participatory design with proxies: developing a desktop-PDA system to support people with aphasia. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2006 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2006. pp. 151-160. Available online
Trewin, Shari, Keates, Simeon and Moffatt, Karyn (2006): Developing steady clicks: a method of cursor assistance for people with motor impairments. In: Eighth Annual ACM Conference on Assistive Technologies 2006. pp. 26-33. Available online
Tee, Kimberly, Moffatt, Karyn, Findlater, Leah, MacGregor, Eve, McGrenere, Joanna, Purves, Barbara and Fels, Sidney (2005): A visual recipe book for persons with language impairments. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2005 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2005. pp. 501-510. Available online
Moffatt, Karyn, McGrenere, Joanna, Purves, Barbara and Klawe, Maria (2004): The participatory design of a sound and image enhanced daily planner for people with aphasia. In: Dykstra-Erickson, Elizabeth and Tscheligi, Manfred (eds.) Proceedings of ACM CHI 2004 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems April 24-29, 2004, Vienna, Austria. pp. 407-414. Available online
McGrenere, Joanna, Davies, Rhian, Findlater, Leah, Graf, Peter, Klawe, Maria, Moffatt, Karyn, Purves, Barbara and Yang, Sarah (2003): Insights from the aphasia project: designing technology for and with people who have aphasia. In: Proceedings of the 2003 ACM Conference on Universal Usability 2003. pp. 112-118. Available online
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