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Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox, March 31, 2002:
Summary:
A core group of elite corporate research labs (and a few universities) defined the field of human-computer interaction and established much of whatever ease of use we now enjoy. With big labs disappearing, the future of HCI research is in jeopardy.
Web design and usability are subsets of the greater discipline of human-computer interaction (HCI). Dating back to Vannevar Bush's description of hypertext in 1945, Doug Engelbart's invention of the mouse in 1964, and many other early projects, HCI has a rich history of research that has defined the way we interact with technology today.
Even though good HCI research occurs at hundreds of worldwide locations, a few research labs have defined the field and nurtured the most important work. Here's my list of the best.
Gold: Microsoft Research
Silver: Xerox PARC
Bronze: Carnegie Mellon University
Unfortunately, the second and more striking conclusion is that the list highlights the rise and fall of the mighty. Very few labs that dominated during the 20th Century have any kind of prominence in HCI today. Also, besides Xerox, only the Bell system made the list more than once.
I certainly don't think that companies go downhill because they fund good user interface research. However, there might be a tendency for companies to reach the top of the HCI field when they've already peaked. Unfortunately, HCI has rarely been the first priority of new research organizations, so by the time research managers recognize the need for it and build up a world-class HCI team, it's often too late.
Although HCI research can be conducted on a small budget, most of the best projects do require the lavish resources that leading corporate labs have historically provided. Now, however, the future of the field is in dire straits because there are almost no big-budget labs left. Will it be worth making a best-of list for 2010-2020? One can only hope.