Paulo Barthelmess

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Publications by Paulo Barthelmess (bibliography)

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» 2007 «

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Kaiser, Edward C., Barthelmess, Paulo, Erdmann, Candice and Cohen, Phil (2007): Multimodal redundancy across handwriting and speech during computer mediated human-human interactions. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2007 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2007. pp. 1009-1018. Available online

Lecturers, presenters and meeting participants often say what they publicly handwrite. In this paper, we report on three empirical explorations of such multimodal redundancy -- during whiteboard presentations, during a spontaneous brainstorming meeting, and during the informal annotation and discussion of photographs. We show that redundantly presented words, compared to other words used during a presentation or meeting, tend to be topic specific and thus are likely to be out-of-vocabulary. We also show that they have significantly higher tf-idf (term frequency-inverse document frequency) weights than other words, which we argue supports the hypothesis that they are dialogue-critical words. We frame the import of these empirical findings by describing SHACER, our recently introduced Speech and HAndwriting reCognizER, which can combine information from instances of redundant handwriting and speech to dynamically learn new vocabulary.

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Barthelmess, Paulo, Kaiser, Edward C. and McGee, David (2007): Toward content-aware multimodal tagging of personal photo collections. In: Massaro, Dominic W., Takeda, Kazuya, Roy, Deb and Potamianos, Alexandros (eds.) Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces - ICMI 2007 November 12-15, 2007, Nagoya, Aichi, Japan. pp. 122-125. Available online

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Barthelmess, Paulo and Kaiser, Edward C. (2007): Workshop on tagging, mining and retrieval of human related activity information. In: Massaro, Dominic W., Takeda, Kazuya, Roy, Deb and Potamianos, Alexandros (eds.) Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces - ICMI 2007 November 12-15, 2007, Nagoya, Aichi, Japan. pp. 383-384. Available online

» 2006 «

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Barthelmess, Paulo, Kaiser, Edward C., Huang, Xiao, McGee, David and Cohen, Philip R. (2006): Collaborative multimodal photo annotation over digital paper. In: Quek, Francis K. H., Yang, Jie, Massaro, Dominic W., Alwan, Abeer A. and Hazen, Timothy J. (eds.) Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces - ICMI 2006 November 2-4, 2006, Banff, Alberta, Canada. pp. 131-132. Available online

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Barthelmess, Paulo, Kaiser, Edward C., Huang, Xiao, McGee, David and Cohen, Philip R. (2006): Collaborative multimodal photo annotation over digital paper. In: Quek, Francis K. H., Yang, Jie, Massaro, Dominic W., Alwan, Abeer A. and Hazen, Timothy J. (eds.) Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces - ICMI 2006 November 2-4, 2006, Banff, Alberta, Canada. pp. 4-11. Available online

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Barthelmess, Paulo, Kaiser, Edward, Lunsford, Rebecca, McGee, David, Cohen, Philip and Oviatt, Sharon (2006): Human-centered collaborative interaction. In: Proceedings of the 2006 ACM International Workshop on Human-Centered Multimedia 2006. pp. 1-8. Available online

Recent years have witnessed an increasing shift in interest from single user multimedia/multimodal interfaces towards support for interaction among groups of people working closely together, e.g. during meetings or problem solving sessions. However, the introduction of technology to support collaborative practices has not been devoid of problems. It is not uncommon that technology meant to support collaboration may introduce disruptions and reduce group effectiveness. Human-centered multimedia and multimodal approaches hold a promise of providing substantially enhanced user experiences by focusing attention on human perceptual and motor capabilities, and on actual user practices. In this paper we examine the problem of providing effective support for collaboration, focusing on the role of human-centered approaches that take advantage of multimodality and multimedia. We show illustrative examples that demonstrate human-centered multimodal and multimedia solutions that provide mechanisms for dealing with the intrinsic complexity of human-human interaction support.

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» 2005 «

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Barthelmess, Paulo, Kaiser, Edward C., Huang, Xiao and Demirdjian, David (2005): Distributed pointing for multimodal collaboration over sketched diagrams. In: Lazzari, Gianni, Pianesi, Fabio, Crowley, James L., Mase, Kenji and Oviatt, Sharon L. (eds.) Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces - ICMI 2005 October 4-6, 2005, Trento, Italy. pp. 10-17. Available online

» 2004 «

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Barthelmess, Paulo and Ellis, Clarence A. (2004): The ThreadMill architecture for stream-oriented human communication analysis applications. In: Sharma, Rajeev, Darrell, Trevor, Harper, Mary P., Lazzari, Gianni and Turk, Matthew (eds.) Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces - ICMI 2004 October 13-15, 2004, State College, PA, USA. pp. 61-68. Available online

» 2002 «

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Barthelmess, Paulo and Anderson, Kenneth M. (2002): A View of Software Development Environments Based on Activity Theory. In Computer Supported Cooperative Work, 11 (1) pp. 13-37

We view software development as a collaborative activity that is typically supported by a software development environment. Since these environments can significantly influence the collaborative nature of a software development project, it is important to analyze and evaluate their capabilities with respect to collaboration. In this paper, we present an analysis and evaluation of the collaborative capabilities of software development environments using an activity theory perspective. The discipline of software engineering (SE) emerged to study and develop artifacts to mediate the collective development of large software systems. While many advances have been made in the past three decades of SE's existence, the historical origins of the discipline are present in that techniques and tools to support the collaborative aspects of large-scale software development are still lacking. One factor is a common ''production-oriented'' philosophy that emphasizes the mechanistic and individualistic aspects of software development over the collaborative aspects thereby ignoring the rich set of human-human interactions that are possible over the course of a software development project. We believe that the issues and ideas surrounding activity theory may be useful in improving support for collaboration in software engineering techniques and tools. As such, we make use of the activity theory to analyze and evaluate process-centered software development environments (PCSDEs).

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Barthelmess, Paulo and Ellis, Clarence A. (2002): Perceptual Collaboration in Neem. In: 4th IEEE International Conference on Multimodal Interfaces - ICMI 2002 14-16 October, 2002, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. pp. 21-26. Available online

» 1995 «

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Barthelmess, Paulo and Wainer, Jacques (1995): WorkFlow Systems: A Few Definitions and a Few Suggestions. In: Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Organizational Computing Systems 1995 August 13-16, 1995, Milpitas, California, USA. pp. 138-147.

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Changes to this page (author)

13 Feb 2010: Enabled abstracts to be shown on Paulo Barthelmess's author page.
23 Jul 2009: Author was edited
30 May 2009: Author was edited
30 May 2009: Author was edited
30 May 2009: Author was edited
30 May 2009: Author was edited
30 May 2009: Author was edited
30 May 2009: Author was edited
30 May 2009: Author was edited
19 Jun 2007: Author was edited
28 Apr 2003: Added the author to the bibliography

Publication statistics

Publication period:1995-2007
Publication count:11
Number of co-authors:14



Productive colleagues

Paulo Barthelmess's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Philip R. Cohen:19
Kenneth M. Anderson:18
Sharon Oviatt:16


Collaboration count

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Edward C. Kaiser:6
David McGee:4
Xiao Huang:3

 

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Mar 19

As a rule, software systems do not work well until they have been used, and have failed repeatedly, in real applications.

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