%0 Book %T Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 2011, Part I %T 13th IFIP TC 13 International Conference, Lisbon, Portugal, September 5-9, 2011, Proceedings %+ Madeira Interactive Technologies Institute [Funchal] %+ School of Computing %+ Departamento de Engenharia Informática %+ Department of Mathematics and Engineering %+ Interactive Critical Systems (IRIT-ICS) %+ Institut de recherche en informatique de Toulouse (IRIT) %A Campos, Pedro %A Graham, Nicholas %A Jorge, Joaquim %A Nunes, Nuno %A Palanque, Philippe %A Winckler, Marco %Z IFIP TC13 : International Federation for Information Processing Technical Committee on Human–Computer Interaction. INTERACT 2011 was the first conference of its series to be organized in cooperation with ACM SIGCHI, the Special Interest Group on Computer–Human Interaction of the Association for Computing Machinery. %@ 978-3-642-23773-7 %I Springer %S Lecture Notes in Computer Science book series (LNCS) %V 6946 %8 2011 %D 2011 %R 10.1007/978-3-642-23774-4 %Z Computer Science [cs]Books %X Advances in interactivity, computing power, mobile devices, large displays and ubiquitous computing offer an ever-increasing potential for empowering users. This can happen within their working environment, in their leisure time or even when extending their social skills. While such empowerment could be seen as a way of connecting people in their workspace, home or on the move, it could also generate gaps requiring larger effort and resources to fruitfully integrate disparate and heterogeneous computing systems. The conference theme of INTERACT 2011 was “building bridges” as we believe human–computer interaction (HCI) is one the research domains more likely to significantly contribute to bridging such gaps. This theme thus recognizes the interdisciplinary and intercultural spirit that lies at the core of HCI research. The conference had the objective of attracting research that bridges disciplines, cultures and societies. Within the broad umbrella of HCI, we were in particular seeking high-quality contributions opening new and emerging HCI disciplines, bridging cultural differences, and tackling important social problems. Thus, INTERACT 2011 provided a forum for practitioners and researchers to discuss all aspects of HCI, including these challenges. The scientific contributions gathered in these proceedings clearly demonstrate the huge potential of that research domain to improving both user experience and performance of people interacting with computing devices. The conference also is as much about building bridges on the human side (between disciplines, cultures and society) as on the computing realm. %G English %Z TC 13 %L hal-01591820 %U https://inria.hal.science/hal-01591820 %~ UNIV-TLSE2 %~ UNIV-TLSE3 %~ CNRS %~ UT1-CAPITOLE %~ IFIP-LNCS %~ IFIP %~ IFIP-AICT %~ IFIP-TC13 %~ IFIP-INTERACT %~ IFIP-LNCS-6948 %~ IRIT %~ IRIT-ICS %~ IRIT-FSL %~ IRIT-UT3 %~ TOULOUSE-INP %~ UNIV-UT3 %~ UT3-INP %~ UT3-TOULOUSEINP