Computer-human Interaction: 8th Asia-pacific Conference, Apchi 2008 Seoul, Korea, July 6-9, 2008, Proceedings (lecture Notes In Computer Science)
by Seongil Lee /
2008 / English / PDF
87.8 MB Download
Welcome to the proceedings of APCHI 2008, the 8th Asia-Pacific
Conference on Computer–Human Interaction held in Seoul, Korea.
Following the success of the preceding APCHI conferences, in
Singapore (1996, 2000), Australia (1997), Japan (1998), China
(2002), New Zealand (2004) and Taiwan (2006), the 8th APCHI brought
together the researchers, developers, practitioners, and educators
in the field of human–computer interaction. APCHI has been a major
forum for scholars and practitioners in the Asia-Pacific region on
the latest challenges and developments in HCI. Theoretical
breakthroughs and practical systems and interfaces were presented
at this 2008 conference, thanks to the support of KADO, the HCI
ITRC of Sungkyu- wan University, and KIST. APCHI 2008 featured a
comprehensive program including keynote speeches, regular paper
presentations, poster, demos, and special panel sessions. To
address the challenge of socially blending ubiquitous computing
technologies and a wider sp- trum of people with a variety of
skills, knowledge, and capabilities, APCHI 2008 set “Universal and
Ubiquitous” as the conference theme. APCHI 2008 attracted a total
of 151 paper submissions. Among such a large number of submissions,
45 full papers were accepted as submitted or with minor revisions.
All papers were reviewed by at least two reviewers. For the
remaining submissions, 41 were recommended to change according to
the reviews and were submitted as extended abstracts and posters.
One special session with six invited papers was organized to
support the conference theme of “Universal and Ubiquitous.
Welcome to the proceedings of APCHI 2008, the 8th Asia-Pacific
Conference on Computer–Human Interaction held in Seoul, Korea.
Following the success of the preceding APCHI conferences, in
Singapore (1996, 2000), Australia (1997), Japan (1998), China
(2002), New Zealand (2004) and Taiwan (2006), the 8th APCHI brought
together the researchers, developers, practitioners, and educators
in the field of human–computer interaction. APCHI has been a major
forum for scholars and practitioners in the Asia-Pacific region on
the latest challenges and developments in HCI. Theoretical
breakthroughs and practical systems and interfaces were presented
at this 2008 conference, thanks to the support of KADO, the HCI
ITRC of Sungkyu- wan University, and KIST. APCHI 2008 featured a
comprehensive program including keynote speeches, regular paper
presentations, poster, demos, and special panel sessions. To
address the challenge of socially blending ubiquitous computing
technologies and a wider sp- trum of people with a variety of
skills, knowledge, and capabilities, APCHI 2008 set “Universal and
Ubiquitous” as the conference theme. APCHI 2008 attracted a total
of 151 paper submissions. Among such a large number of submissions,
45 full papers were accepted as submitted or with minor revisions.
All papers were reviewed by at least two reviewers. For the
remaining submissions, 41 were recommended to change according to
the reviews and were submitted as extended abstracts and posters.
One special session with six invited papers was organized to
support the conference theme of “Universal and Ubiquitous.