Ben Shneiderman receives CHI Lifetime Achievement Award at CHI2001 Conference
The CHI Lifetime Achievement Award is for: Cumulative contributions to the field,
Influence on the work of others, Development of new research directions
For Immediate Release (revised) February 16, 2001
Ben Shneiderman to be honored at CHI 2001
Ben Shneiderman, Professor of Computer Science and Director of the University of
Maryland's Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) Laboratory has been selected to
receive the prestigious CHI Lifetime Achievement for his commitment to the HCI
field of study. The award will be presented to Shneiderman during the CHI 2001
conference to be held in Seattle, Washington, USA from 31 March through 5 April 2001.
For over 25 years Ben Shneiderman has promoted human-computer interaction by writing,
lecturing and researching about HCI. His landmark book, Software Psychology, made
the world aware of the human aspects of computing while his internationally-acclaimed
book, Designing the User Interface: Strategies for Effective Human-Computer Interaction,
significantly shaped the HCI field for graduates, researchers, and practitioners all
over the world. His widely-cited 1983 paper described the nuances of direct manipulation.
He soon applied these concepts to mouseable text links, called embedded menus, which are
now commonly known as hot links on the World Wide Web.
This is the second year that the CHI Lifetime Achievement Award has been presented.
According to Marilyn Tremaine, Executive Chair of the Association for Computing
Machinery's (ACM) Special Interest Group in Computer-Human Interaction (SIGCHI),
"The award was established to honor those who have made a major contribution to the
field of human-computer interaction. Ben's pioneering work is key to our mission to
integrate human concerns in order to accelerate technological advancement."
During the CHI conference Shneiderman and Dr. Catherine Plaisant will conduct a full-day
tutorial called "Information Visualization", which emphasizes visualization concepts and
current research results, and their application to interface design. The CHI conference
is held annually and is sponsored by the special interest group in the field of computer-human
interaction (SIGCHI). The conference theme -- anyone. anywhere. -- reflects the growing
and universal influence of technology on our lives and the concept that technology should
be accessible to everyone, everywhere. The six-day event features 32 tutorials sessions,
15 workshops, a two-day state of the science exchange on the accessibility of technology
for those with disabilities, a design expo, and three full days of technical sessions.
Bill Gates, chairman of Microsoft, will be the keynote speaker on Tuesday, April 3.
CHI 2001 sponsors include Microsoft, Motorola, Siebel eBusiness, Sun Microsystems, UNISYS,
WebCriteria, Yahoo!, AT&T, Cisco Systems, FXPAL, HP Invent, IBM, Lucent Technologies,
MONKEYmedia, Nokia, Noldus, ORACLE, Sapient, and User Interface Engineering.
For more information go to www.acm.org/chi2001
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Ben Shneiderman's thank you speech at the close of the CHI2001 conference
April 5, 2001:
Dear Friends and Colleagues,
I'm grateful for the recognition you have given me today. It is an honor
and a pleasure to accept this award -- and it makes me reflect with
satisfaction on the 18 years of SIGCHI history and conferences. I think of
how many people have been part of and contributed to SIGCHI's success. Last
year Stu Card received this award and today others on the stage are also
rightfully honored for their roles and creative contributions.
Hilary Clinton wrote a book called It Takes a Village, to describe the
extensive community that is needed to raise a child. If I were writing a
book about what it took to create our new discipline of human-computer
interaction I might use the title "It Takes a Listserv"... because the rich
interaction with academic colleagues, students, industrial researchers, and
other professionals by electronic means and in person is what it took to
create our new discipline.
In addition to the many SIGCHI connections, my close colleagues at the
University of Maryland have included Kent Norman in Psychology, Gary
Marchionini in Information science, my research partner for 14 years
Catherine Plaisant... also my dear buddy Charles Kreitzberg of Cognetics
Corporation, and Jenny Preece who has become a wonderful intellectual
partner and emotional supporter - a special hug goes to her. In the past 3
years our Human-Computer Interaction Lab at the University of Maryland has
been energized by Allison Druin and Ben Bederson, for whom we all wish a
happy outcome in his thus far successful fight against cancer.
I am especially appreciative of my PhD students starting with Andrew Sears
whose leadership of this conference with Julie Jacko has made it not only
the biggest but also one of the best. Other doctoral students included
Brian Johnson, David Carr, Eser Kandogan, Richard Potter, Chris North, and
Egemen Tanin. Then there were the many grad and undergrad students who have
been collaborators. I ask them to please stand and be acknowledged.
As I reviewed my resume in preparation I found that only about a third of my
300 books, papers, articles, and videos were written by me alone... the
others emerged from collaborations with 165 people who should share in this
honor.
...and there is enough honor to go around...during these past twenty years,
the SIGCHI community has provided a rich environment for forming the new
discipline of HCI and new profession of usability engineering. The world
has admired and applied our products... we are a growing part of the
culture, from the web's hot links to the iMAC colors to Hollywood's
interpretation of You've got mail.
We have lots to be proud of...BUT there's lots of work to do. Many of you
continue to struggle in your universities and organizations as you seek to
promote greater attention to the users and their needs. We need each other
to provide a rigorous intellectual foundation and an emotional support
system for these struggles....this is what SIGCHI does best - this
conference offers more new ideas and more hugs per hour than any other
professional event I attend.
But now we have to also go beyond our circle of colleagues and engage
researchers in related disciplines and workers in other professions to
broaden awareness of the importance of the users and their experiences. The
old computing is about what computers can do; the new computing is about
what people can do. We have to fight for the users and raise the quality of
user experiences so that doctors, teachers, and students, can be more
successful more of the time. But we also have to think about job seekers
finding work, the single parents looking for community services, and the
patients who need healthcare information and emotional support.
Our profession will be best remembered for speaking up for those who cannot
speak for themselves. The theme of this conference is "Anyone Anywhere,"
and that is a big step towards a firm commitment to universal usability.
This term was the title of a new SIGCHI conference that we held last
November. The 250 attendees shared a passion for design strategies that
enable disabled, elderly, children, minority, low education, low income, and
users from diverse cultures to find services that are useful and usable.
So I close by encouraging you to reach out to people around you to find
collaborators and build a better world - to empower users to be more
creative, decision makers to be wiser, doctors to be more effective, and
teachers to be more inspiring. I hope you'll have the satisfaction of
helping to make the world a little safer, a little more peaceful, and a
little more joyous.