2023 | ||
Thursday, August 10th | ||
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12:00 AM |
ChatGPT and GPTZero in Research and Social Media: A Sentiment- and Topic-based Analysis Maximilian Heumann, Leibniz University Hannover 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Consumer Participation in Virtual Product Design: 2D vs 3D Product Configurators Inaiya Armeen, University of Alabama 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Conversational Agents in Service Context: Towards a Classification of Human-like Design Expectations Fabian Hildebrandt, Technische Universität Dresden 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Marran Aldossari, University of North Carolina at Charlotte 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Richard Stromer, Stanford University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Emotion in Motion: Experiment on Affective Responses to Virtual Realities Elpida Bampouni, Tampere University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Extended Review on the User Evaluation of Teleoperation Interfaces for Professional Service Robots Gaayathri Sankar, Worcester Polytechnic Institute 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Formative Validity of A Novel Authentication Artifact for Augmented and Virtual Realities Christopher Kreider, Dakota State University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Martin Böhmer, Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
The Effects of Digital Nudging on User Satisfaction in Online Customization Shouwang Lu, Renmin University of China 12:00 AM |
The AMCIS 2023 HCI Track will provide a forum for AIS members to present, discuss and explore a wide range of issues related to Human-Computer Interaction and Information Systems. Human Computer Interaction (HCI) is an interdisciplinary area that has attracted researchers, educators, and practitioners from several disciplines. It essentially deals with the design, evaluation, adoption, and use of information technology, with a common focus on improved user performance and experience. New and exciting research opportunities are emerging, including issues and challenges concerning people’s interactions with various information technologies that can be examined from an organizational, managerial, psychological, social, or cultural perspective. This track welcomes papers that aim at advancing our understanding of human‐computer interaction at the individual, work group, organization, or society levels. Submissions may use any type of research method.
Track Chairs
Dezhi Wu, University of South Carolina, DEZHIWU@cec.sc.edu
Jeff Jenkins, Brigham Young University, jeffrey_jenkins@byu.edu
Miguel Aguirre-Urreta, Florida International University, miguel.aguirreurreta@fiu.edu