1 Journal on Multimodal User Interfaces
2 IJHCI
3 HCI
Human&Computer Interaction (HCI) is a multidisciplinary journal defining and reporting on fundamental research in human computer interaction. The goal of HCI is to be a journal of the highest quality that combines the best research and design work to extend our understanding of human computer interaction. The target audience is the research community with an interest in both the scientific implications and practical relevance of how interactive computer systems should be designed and how they are actually used. HCI is concerned with the theoretical, empirical, and methodological issues of interaction science and system design as it affects the user. Interaction Science.
HCI seeks to foster a scientific understanding of the cognitive and social behavior of system users and the organizational and social impacts of that usage. Studies of usage can cover individuals, groups, communities, organizations, and networks, as well as societal impacts of system use. We encourage theoretical, empirical and methodological contributions. Theoretical papers should deal with scientific models of user learning or performance, or with social models of the user community. Empirical papers may range from quantitative controlled laboratory experimentation to field observation using qualitative methods. Methodological papers should analyze and study research methods. System Desig
HCI seeks to foster rational discussion of, and methods for, the design of computer systems and the evaluation of existing systems. HCI is interested in a range of issues from new user interface techniques to the process of system design. Theoretical papers should deal with design principles underlying a particular system or class of systems, or with different approaches to designing interactive systems. Empirical papers may assess existing or novel interaction techniques, or examine the design process itself. Methodological papers should be concerned with the application of design principles, the rationalization of design alternatives, or the role of empirical methods in the design process.
HCI is a multidisciplinary journal, so papers must have scientific implications, system design implications, and analyses of how systems are actually used. HCI favors substantial papers dealing with extended programs of research and design. HCI is not interested in narrow papers focusing on issues of limited or only specialized interest or in papers reporting only preliminary results. Theoretical, framework, review papers, or even essays are welcomed; but they are expected to present a rigorous analysis developing new conceptual views or codifications of existing materials that imply future research directions. HCI aims to foster discussion in the research community and welcomes commentaries that reflect on or critique existing published HCI papers. Papers articulating new or “non-standard” perspectives are also actively encouraged.
4 IJHCS
4 COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR