Programme Overview
| Monday 5 Sep | |
| Tuesday 6 Sep |
Tutorials and Workshops (2nd day), |
| Wednesday 7 Sep | Full programme for first day of Papers and Panels |
| Thursday 8 Sep | Industry Day Presentations |
| Friday 9 Sep | Full programme for the final day |
download the full programme as a PDF file (1MB)
Keynotes
Five high-profile speakers will deliver the conference keynotes: Ted Nelson (Oxford Internet Institute), Mary Czerwinski (Microsoft Research) and Alistair Sutcliffe (UMIST), and on Industry Day Ashley Friedlein (E-Consultancy.com) and Jackie Lee-Joe (Orange).
details of speakers and their keynotes
Full Papers
We are pleased to announce that 30 papers were accepted. Authors come from 12 countries around the globe.
list of accepted full papers
Tutorials and Workshops (Mon and Tue)
We invite you to attend the tutorials and workshops which run throughout the first two days of the conference. The fee for a full-day workshop is only £75 or £140 for a full-day tutorial, and you can reserve your place when you register for the conference. Note that workshop participants must be accepted by the relevant organisers prior to booking - see the workshop details for insructions.
list of tutorials
list of workshops
IDEC 2005: International Design and Engagability Conference (Tuesday)
IDEC 2005 welcomes theoretical, empirical papers and interactive user experiences dealing with any aspects of engaging designs, products and services. IDEC 2005 will bring together academics, researchers, designers and companies interested in engaging products, services and designs. With case studies, theoretical papers and interactive user experiences, the conference programme is designed to create a lively atmosphere, as at the first year of the conference.
more details on IDEC 2005
Industry Day (Thursday)
A full day of the conference is dedicated to industry and practicioners. The keynotes will be delivered by Ashley Friedlein of E-Consultancy.com and Jackie Lee-Joe, Head of Brand Experience for Orange. Other invited speakers are:
- How accessibility guidelines are no substitute for usability testing
Chris Rourke, Director of User Vision - Why standards are confusing and what we are doing to make them more usable
Tom Stewart, Managing Director of System Concepts - (topic to be decided)
Julie Howell, Digital Policy Development Manager with RNIB - How software usability is coming of age: the transition to mature and institutionalised usability
Eric Schaffer, CEO of Human Factors International
