Game theory and the social contract II: Just playing: By Ken Binmore. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA. (1998). 589 pages. $50.00
- Book ID
- 104353485
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 108 KB
- Volume
- 36
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0898-1221
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Human Values and the Design of Computer Technoloqy. Edited by Batya Friedman. CSLI Publications/Cambridge University Press, Standford, CA/New York. (1997). 320 pages. $64.95 (hardback); $24.95 (paperback). Contents:
Acknowledgments. Contributors. Introduction (Batya Friedman). I. Conceptualizing human values in design. 1. Bias in computer systems (Batya Friedman and Helen Nissenbaum). 2. Accountability in a computerized society (Helen Nissenbaum). 3. Disability, inability and cyberspace (John Perry, Elizabeth Macken, Neil Scott and Janice L. McKinley). 4. Do categories have politics? The language/action perspective reconsidered (Lucy Suchman). 5. Categories, disciplines, and social coordination (Terry Winograd). 6. Commentary on Suchman article and Winograd response (Thomas W. Malone). 7. Social impact statements: Engaging public participation in information technology design (Ben Shneidermand and Anne Rose). II. Computers as persons?--Implications for design. 8. Computers are social actors: A review of current research (Clifford I. Nass, Youngrae Moon, John Morkes, Eun-Young Kim and B.J. Fogg). 9. When the interface is a face (Lee Sproull, Mani Subramani, Sara Kiesler, Janet Walker and Keith Water). 10. 'Social' human-computer interaction (Sara Kiesler and Lee Sproull). 11. Reasoning about computers as moral agents: A research note (Batya Friedman and Lynette I. Millett). 12. Interface agents: Metaphors with character (Brenda Laurel). 13. Human agency and responsible computing: Implications for computer system design (Batya Friedman and Peter H. Kahn, Jr. III. Practicing value-sensitive design. 14: Workplace database systems: Difficulties of data collection and presentation (Harry Hochheiser). 15. Eliminating a hardware switch: Weighing economics and values in a design decision (John C. Tang). 16. Steps toward universal access within a communications company (John C. Thomas). 17. Social choice about privacy: Intelligent vehicle-highway systems in the United States (Philip E. Agre and Christine A. Mailloux). Name index.
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