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Formal Methods in Human-Computer Interaction

Harrison, Michael(Edited by)Thimbleby, Harold(Edited by)
Part of the Cambridge Series on Human-Computer Interaction series
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First published in 1990, this book discusses the application of formal methods to the human-computer interface.

Formal methods - the attempt to provide methods that rigourously and unambiguously describe the behaviour of a computer program or system - is receiving a great deal of attention in human-computer interaction (HCI).

Topics such as the specification of a system, the construction of a system from its specification and the abstraction of a specification from an existing system, are clearly of great theoretical and practical interest.

The contributors to the work are well-known in the field of HCI and their articles cover much of the work in the area.

The book is a series of papers specially commissioned by the editors for the book; it is thus a coherent and important contribution to the area.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
052137202X / 9780521372022
Hardback
22/02/1990
United States
344 pages
174 x 247 mm, 772 grams