Marcos Alonso

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Publications by Marcos Alonso (bibliography)

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2007
 
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Jordà, Sergi, Geiger, Günter, Alonso, Marcos and Kaltenbrunner, Martin (2007): The reacTable: exploring the synergy between live music performance and tabletop tangible interfaces. In: Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Tangible and Embedded Interaction 2007. pp. 139-146.

In recent years we have seen a proliferation of musical tables. Believing that this is not just the result of a tabletop trend, in this paper we first discuss several of the reasons for which live music performance and HCI in general, and musical instruments and tabletop interfaces in particular, can lead to a fertile two-way cross-pollination that can equally benefit both fields. After that, we present the reacTable, a musical instrument based on a tabletop interface that exemplifies several of these potential achievements.

© All rights reserved Jordà et al. and/or ACM Press

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Changes to this page (author)

16 Feb 2010: Enabled abstracts to be shown on Marcos Alonso's author page.
24 Jul 2007: Author was added to the bibliography

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URL: http://www.interaction-design.org/references/authors/marcos_alonso.html

Publication statistics

Pub. period:2007-2007
Pub. count:1
Number of co-authors:3



Co-authors

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Martin Kaltenbrunner:1
Günter Geiger:1
Sergi Jordà:1

 

 

Productive colleagues

Marcos Alonso's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Sergi Jordà:5
Martin Kaltenbrunn..:4
Günter Geiger:1
 
Dec 14

What is this field of Human-Computer Interaction? People are quite different from computers. This is hardly a novel observation, but whenever people use computers, there is necessarily a zone of mutual accommodation and this defines our area of interest. People are so adaptable that they are capable of shouldering the entire burden of accommodation to an artifact, but skillful designers make large parts of this burden vanish by adapting the artifact to its users. To understand successful design requires an understanding of the technology, the person, and their mutual interaction [...]

-- Stephen Draper and Donald Norman. In "User Centered System Design" (1986) p. 1

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