HF Perspectives on HCI

Call for Reviewers

Document URL: http://hcibib.org/perlman/hfeshci/call.html
Table of Contents

Introduction

The HFES has approved a proposal to create a collection of the best papers on Human-Computer Interaction from the HFES annual meetings from 1983-1994. This will tend to focus on papers from the Computer Systems Technical Group sessions, but papers from all sessions will be considered. A maximum of about 75 papers will be selected, the main constraint being an absolute limit of 400 printed pages. A companion disk with searchable material is being considered.

This is an important opportunity to make the best work of the HFES much more accessible to HCI researchers, practitioners, educators, and students. It will show the HCI community the sound work (particularly methodological and empirical) for which the HFES is (or should be) known, providing a meaningful contrast to related organizations (e.g., ACM SIGCHI). World-Wide Web users can access information on the project at: http://hcibib.org/perlman/hfeshci which includes a link to the original project proposal.

The editors (Gary Perlman, Georgia Green, Mike Wogalter) are enlisting the help of many reviewers to rate the quality, lasting contribution, and area of contribution of previously published papers. The ratings will be used to rank the papers, and from the highest ranked, the collection will be created. We hope to have the collection published in time for the 1995 annual meeting in San Diego. This requires an aggressive schedule and the cooperation of many people, especially the reviewers. We need your help!

Please read the following review plan, and if you are willing to volunteer, send email along with your preferred postal address to: hfes-hci@cis.ohio-state.edu. Reviewers will (unless they request otherwise) be acknowledged in the preface and in any electronic versions of the collection.

Review-Related Tasks

Create List of Potential Reviewers

Because of the tight schedule, only the following reviewers are being recruited:
  1. Only members and fellows of the HFES (we want to draw from an experienced group of reviewers);
  2. From those, only CSTG members (although papers may be drawn from any area);
  3. From those, only those with working email addresses (which we will use to enlist reviewers, send instructions, and gather reviews);
  4. From those, only members in the US and Canada (because we plan to exchange some paper mail);
  5. And from those, only volunteers who can provide their reviews by the end of June.
Although the list seems restrictive, there are about 400 qualified reviewers in the HFES, although not all will have the time or inclination to volunteer. Reviewers outside the U.S. and Canada with reliable email and a complete set of proceedings back to 1983 would be welcomed, but mailing delays and costs would strain both our schedule and budget, respectively.

Send (via Email) A Call for Reviewers

Using the email list generated above, we hope to enlist the help of 50-100 volunteer reviewers. Will want multiple independent reviews for hundreds of candidate papers.

Pre-Filter the Papers for Relevance

The HFES proceedings for the annual meetings from 1987-1994 are already represented in the HCI Bibliography with online abstracted bibliographic entries. The authors and titles for the preceding years will be OCR scanned so that they can be manipulated online by the editors and later by the reviewers.

The following will be filtered out automatically:

The three editors will go through the remaining papers from the designated years and rate each for for relevance to current HCI research and practice. Papers that are determined to be relevant by a majority of the editors will be placed in the review pool. We estimated initially that there would be a pool of 300 relevant papers.

Choose and Document Review Criteria

The review criteria will be chosen to help identify the HCI-relevant papers of which the HFES would be most proud to provide as a showcase. We will probably include five-point scales on the overall quality and relevance to current HCI research and practice. Some elaborations of these criteria include:

Along with the ratings of quality, we will also ask for a set of keyword phrase identifiers from a list we will provide, as well as any other keywords thought to be useful. These will be used to categorize the papers chosen for inclusion, but we would also like to use the keywords to aid online search, so we will want to gather high-quality keywords for each paper rated.

Finally, we will be asking for comments to support the ratings. Comments about the methodology, significance, relevance to today's technology, and other attributes that go into an overall rating will be useful to make decisions about inclusion, particularly if the reviews for a paper vary a lot.

Send Papers to Reviewers

We want to get three reviews per paper, multiplied by an estimate pool of 300 papers, requires 900 reviews! A random sample of papers, possibly spanning many different years, will be assigned to each reviewer, ideally, avoiding obvious conflicts of interest. We plan to send printed copies so that the reviewers do not have to (1) locate, (2) retrieve, and (3) carry copies of the proceedings (the difficulty of these tasks is one reason why we think the collection is a good idea).

We have not yet determined the number of papers that will need to be reviewed, but that in part will depend on the number of volunteers. The effort to review these papers should be less than ordinary reviews because:

This is to say, "We will be assigning you a bigger pile of papers to review that you might expect, but the reviews should not take you nearly as long as you might fear."

Receive Reviews from Reviewers

All reviews will be emailed to: hfes-hci-reviews@cis.ohio-state.edu using electronic templates that will be provided in conjunction with the distribution of papers for review.
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