School of Computer Science
5302 Herzberg Building
613-520-2600, ext 3244
hcidegree.carleton.ca
Carleton School of Information Technology
230 Azrieli Pavilion
613-520-2600, ext 1795
http://hcidegree.carleton.ca
This section presents the requirements for programs in:
- M.A. Human-Computer Interaction
- M.A.Sc. Human-Computer Interaction
- M.C.S. Human-Computer Interaction
Program Requirements
The HCI program comprises 5.0 credits of which 2.5 credits are devoted to course work, and 2.5 credits to a thesis.
Every student must enrol in one of three streams, Master of Arts, Master of Applied Science, or Master of Computer Science, depending on their native discipline.
M.A. Human-Computer Interaction (5.0 credits)
Requirements: | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
HCIN 5100 [0.5] | Fundamentals of HCI Design and Evaluation | |
2. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
HCIN 5200 [0.5] | Software and User Interface Development | |
3. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
HCIN 5300 [0.5] | Emerging Interaction Techniques | |
Students in the M.A. stream must also complete one of the following: | 0.5 | |
Experimental Methods and Statistics | ||
HCIN 5403 [0.5] | Research methods in HCI | |
4. 0.5 credit from a wide range of available electives with the guidance and permission of the supervisor of graduate studies | 0.5 | |
5. 2.5 credits in: | 2.5 | |
HCIN 5909 [2.5] | Thesis in Human-Computer Interaction | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
M.A.Sc. Human-Computer Interaction (5.0 credits)
Requirements: | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
HCIN 5100 [0.5] | Fundamentals of HCI Design and Evaluation | |
2. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
HCIN 5200 [0.5] | Software and User Interface Development | |
3. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
HCIN 5300 [0.5] | Emerging Interaction Techniques | |
Students in the M.A.Sc. stream must also complete one of the following: | 0.5 | |
Design Research Methods | ||
Methodologies for Discrete-Event Modelling and Simulation | ||
4. 0.5 credit from a wide range of available electives with the guidance and permission of the supervisor of graduate studies. | 0.5 | |
5. 2.5 credits in: | 2.5 | |
HCIN 5909 [2.5] | Thesis in Human-Computer Interaction | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
M.C.S. Human-Computer Interaction (5.0 credits)
Requirements: | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
HCIN 5100 [0.5] | Fundamentals of HCI Design and Evaluation | |
2. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
HCIN 5200 [0.5] | Software and User Interface Development | |
3. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
HCIN 5300 [0.5] | Emerging Interaction Techniques | |
4. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
Object-Oriented Software Development | ||
5. 0.5 credit from a wide range of available electives with the guidance and permission of the supervisor of graduate studies | 0.5 | |
6. 2.5 credits in: | 2.5 | |
HCIN 5909 [2.5] | Thesis in Human-Computer Interaction | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Human-Computer Interaction (HCIN) Courses
Fundamentals of HCI Design and Evaluation
Strategies and practices in HCI design and evaluation. Students will learn to perform studies in user interface analysis and design, read research literature critically, distill important points from readings, summarize, write papers, design user interfaces and present their work.
Software and User Interface Development
Design and development of user interfaces for software systems based on principles for supporting user interaction, with emphasis on frameworks, tools, and processes for user interface development.
Emerging Interaction Techniques
Advanced interaction styles and their associated technologies. Topics may include hand held and gestural interactions, ubiquitous computing, deformable user interfaces, physiological computing and tangible user interfaces.
Experimental Methods and Statistics
An introduction to the design of experiments and the statistics needed to interpret data.
Research methods in HCI
An introduction to quantitative and qualitative research methods in HCI. Students will acquire skills in collecting and analyzing HCI data, presenting the findings and specifying practical implications.
Design Research Methods
Critical analysis of research methods in design and disciplines contributing to design including anthropology, psychology, sociology, and business. Application areas include advanced materials and manufacturing processes, advanced visualization, product interaction design, extreme environments, sustainable design, design and culture, design management, and human-oriented design.
Methodologies for Discrete-Event Modelling and Simulation
Methodological aspects of simulation. Modelling discrete events systems. Modeling formalisms: FSA, FSM, Petri Nets, DEVS, others. Verification and Verification. Cellular models: Cellular Automata, Cell-DEVS. Continous and hybrid models. Parallel and Distributed simulation (PADS) techniques. PADS middleware: HLA, Parallel-DEVS, Time-Warp.
Object-Oriented Software Development
Issues in modeling and verifying quality and variability in object-oriented systems. Testable models in model-driven and test-driven approaches. System family engineering. Functional conformance: scenario modeling and verification, design by contract. Conformance to non functional requirements: goals, forces and tradeoffs, metrics.
Directed Studies
Independent study under supervision of a member of the Human/Computer Interaction faculty. Students are required to obtain their supervisor's written approval prior to registration and are limited to one such course in their program.
Advanced Topics
Topics not ordinarily treated in the regular course program due to their contemporary subject matter. The choice of topics varies from year to year. Details will be available at the time of registration.
Thesis in Human-Computer Interaction
Summer session: some of the courses listed in this Calendar are offered during the summer. Hours and scheduling for summer session courses will differ significantly from those reported in the fall/winter Calendar. To determine the scheduling and hours for summer session classes, consult the class schedule at central.carleton.ca
Not all courses listed are offered in a given year. For an up-to-date statement of course offerings for the current session and to determine the term of offering, consult the class schedule at central.carleton.ca
Admission
Applicants for the M.A. program will normally hold an Honours degree or equivalent professional degree in Arts, Social Sciences, Business, or related areas with Highest Honours.
Applicants for the M.A.Sc. program will normally hold an Honours degree in Engineering, Architecture, Design, or related areas with Highest Honours.
Applicants for the M.C.S. degree will normally hold an Honours degree in Computer Science. Applicants with a background in Cognitive Science will be considered for whichever of the three programs is appropriate to their particular academic background.
Applicants judged to be generally acceptable but deficient in some preparation may be asked to complete course-work in addition to the program requirements.
In addition to transcripts and letters of reference, application packages will include a statement of interest outlining the applicant's proposed area of research.