Human-centred computing not elsewhere classified research encompasses research that focuses on understanding and improving interactions between humans and computing technologies beyond established categories. This field covers areas such as affective computing, social robotics, and collaborative computing that emphasize human needs and behaviours in technology design. As a vital part of Information and Computing Sciences, it helps shape innovative systems that respond to social and cognitive aspects. JoVE Visualize pairs PubMed articles with JoVE’s experiment videos, offering researchers and students a richer and more practical grasp of the methods and findings driving this evolving area.
Established methods in human-centred computing not elsewhere classified frequently include human-computer interaction studies, user experience research, and information visualisation techniques. These approaches analyse human behaviour and system usability, often through experimental design, qualitative analysis, and cognitive modelling. Mixed-initiative and human-in-the-loop frameworks play central roles, integrating continuous human feedback to enhance system performance. Social computing methodologies also explore how technology supports collaboration and communication in diverse settings, laying a foundation for more responsive, human-focused systems.
Innovative research trends in this category actively explore affective computing, which involves interpreting human emotions using computational tools, and social robotics, where interactive robots engage with users in social contexts. Advances in adaptive interfaces, natural language processing, and multimodal interaction broaden the scope of human-centred computing by enabling more intuitive and personalised technology experiences. Additionally, novel applications leveraging machine learning in human-in-the-loop systems aim to create smarter, context-aware environments. These emerging methods reflect a growing emphasis on enhancing user engagement and accessibility in complex socio-technical systems.
Hui-Ying Li, Meng-Yu Bao, Hao-Ming Xiong, Can-Can Wang, Li-Ping Bai, Wei Zhang, Cheng-Yu Chen, Zhi-Hong Jiang, Guo-Yuan Zhu
N Castro Casal, N Olivier Pascual, R Arroyo Castillo
Liangliang Wu, Xiaowei Chen, Ming Zhou, Wenjian Mo, Ruiqing Zhou, Yumiao Li, Shilin Xu, Caixia Wang, Shiyi Pan, Wei Zhou, Tingfen Deng, Yuling Zhang, Yuping Zhang, Shunqing Wang
Pascale Changenet, François Hache
Yi Liu, Jiaqi Dong, Yuqing Qiu, Bo-Ru Yang, Zong Qin
Mac Skelton, Layth Mula-Hussain, Richard Sullivan, Gemma Bowsher, Loma Al-Mansouri, Omar Dewachi
Gizelle Francis, Youssef Omar, Alexander Moise, Kalpesh Hathi, Dorsa Mavedatnia, Elysia Grose, Timothy Phillips
Miles G Gibson, Zachary T Terrell, Jackson G Burns, Samuel E Neher, Stephanie L Bradley, Paul P Potnuru