Jungmi Park's Library tagged → View Popular, Search in Google
in list: research tool
-
- Papers are accepted only in English. British English spelling and punctuation is preferred.
- A typical article will not exceed 6000 words. Papers that greatly exceed this will be critically reviewed with respect to length. Authors should include a word count with their manuscript.
- Manuscripts should be compiled in the following order: title page; abstract; keywords; main text; acknowledgments; appendixes (as appropriate); references; table(s) with caption(s) (on individual pages); figure caption(s) (as a list).
-
TOCHI is committed to being the premier archival journal in human-computer interaction. It publishes only original and significant research papers. Manuscript length of up to approximately 11000 words is recommended, although longer papers will be considered. Survey papers will be considered only if they present a new perspective or clearly benefit the field. TOCHI will also consider ideas for special issues.
Note: Authors can now be concise AND thorough in a way not possible before: The ACM Digital Library will host ancillary material for a paper on its web site. This material, an online appendix that does not appear in the print journal, is linked to and accessed nicely from the online table of contents. This allows the best of both worlds: a concise presentation that is more likely to be read by general readers and students, and details (e.g., complete questionnaires, raw data, an annotated bibliography, or short animations) that are of interest mainly to others working in the area. Authors that wish to use this option should attach such material as an appendix to their submission and indicate in their cover letter that this material is intended to be ancillary material included in the digital library.
-
TOCHI is committed to being the premier archival journal in human-computer interaction. It publishes only original and significant research papers. Manuscript length of up to approximately 11000 words is recommended, although longer papers will be considered. Survey papers will be considered only if they present a new perspective or clearly benefit the field. TOCHI will also consider ideas for special issues.
Note: Authors can now be concise AND thorough in a way not possible before: The ACM Digital Library will host ancillary material for a paper on its web site. This material, an online appendix that does not appear in the print journal, is linked to and accessed nicely from the online table of contents. This allows the best of both worlds: a concise presentation that is more likely to be read by general readers and students, and details (e.g., complete questionnaires, raw data, an annotated bibliography, or short animations) that are of interest mainly to others working in the area. Authors that wish to use this option should attach such material as an appendix to their submission and indicate in their cover letter that this material is intended to be ancillary material included in the digital library.
- 9 more annotation(s)...
-
ACM IN-TEXT CITATION STYLE
The in-text citation style is as follows: For parenthetical citations we enclose the last name of the first author and year of publication, thus: [Burando 2007]; when there are two authors, both last names and the year of publication are included [Burando and Lee 2007]; when there are more than two authors, we cite the last name of the first author followed by an "et al." [Burando et al. 2007]. Sequential parenthetical citations are enclosed in square brackets and separated by semi-colons, thus [Burando 2007; Burando and Lee 2007]. When a citation is part of a sentence, the name of the author is NOT enclosed in brackets, but the year is: "So we see that Burando et al. [2007]…"
When an author has more than one article published in the same year, the citation becomes [Burando 2007a] and [Burando 2007b].
in list: research tool
-
"As Thomas and Carroll (1979: p 7) suggest ", or all in parentheses where authors' names are not cited specifically in text, e.g. "As some authors suggest (Jones, 1984; Cross, 2006) ". Be specific: do not give long lists of vaguely relevant sources. Where directly quoting from a source, or referring to a specific topic within a source, give the page number(s). List all references at the end of the text, following the citation style recommended by the American Psychological Association.
Selected Tags
Related Tags
Top Contributors
Groups interested in journal
-
Professional Development
Items: 29 | Visits: 52
Created by: Cathy Evanoff
-
Journal Author Guidlines
Items: 61 | Visits: 118
Created by: Liz White
-
TEDTalks
A list of TED Talks videos f...
Items: 21 | Visits: 113
Created by: Kathe Weltchek
Diigo is about better ways to research, share and collaborate on information. Learn more »
Join Diigo
