@article{wilson_orphanides_2018, title={It’s Made of People: Designing Systems for Humans}, volume={44}, url={https://doi.org/10.1080/00987913.2018.1525244}, DOI={10.1080/00987913.2018.1525244}, abstractNote={Abstract Technical services staff, along with programmers, supervisors, and frontline librarians, participate in all sorts of systems. Whether they recognize it or not, they are used to interacting with the world through the lens of the systems they work with. In this presentation from the North Carolina Serials Conference, Andreas Orphanides looks at some of the challenges of interacting with the world in terms of systems, discusses the human costs of failing to recognize the limitations of systems, and provides a framework for thinking about systems to help ensure that our systems respect the humanity of their human participants.}, number={3}, journal={Serials Review}, publisher={Informa UK Limited}, author={Wilson, Kristen and Orphanides, Andreas}, year={2018}, month={Jul}, pages={211–216} } @misc{orphanides_nam_2017, title={Touchscreen interfaces in context: A systematic review of research into touchscreens across settings, populations, and implementations}, volume={61}, ISSN={["1872-9126"]}, DOI={10.1016/j.apergo.2017.01.013}, abstractNote={Although many studies have been conducted on the human factors and ergonomics (HFE) of touchscreens, no comprehensive review has summarized the findings of these studies. Based on a schema (three dimensions of understanding critical for successful display selection) presented by Wickens et al. (2004), we identified three dimensions of analysis for touchscreen implementations: touchscreen technology, setting and environment of implementation, and user population. We conducted a systematic review based on the PRISMA protocol (Moher et al., 2009), searching five article databases for relevant quantitative literature on touchscreens. We found that all three dimensions of analysis have a significant effect on the HFE of touchscreens, and that a selection for or against touchscreens must take into consideration the specific context of system interaction in order to maximize safety, performance, and user satisfaction. Our report concludes with a set of specific recommendations for systems designers considering touchscreens as input/output devices, and suggestions for future study into the HFE of touchscreens.}, journal={APPLIED ERGONOMICS}, publisher={Elsevier}, author={Orphanides, Andreas K. and Nam, Chang S.}, year={2017}, month={May}, pages={116–143} } @article{orphanides_2011, title={Lessons in public touchscreen development}, volume={15}, url={https://journal.code4lib.org/articles/5832}, journal={Code4lib Journal}, author={Orphanides, Andreas K}, year={2011} } @article{chen_dipasquale_ko_orphanides_2009, title={CONFERENCE REPORT: Code4Lib 2009}, url={https://journal.code4lib.org/articles/998}, journal={Code4Lib Journal}, author={Chen, Jie and DiPasquale, Joanna and Ko, Lauren and Orphanides, Andreas}, year={2009}, month={Mar} } @article{orphanides_2008, title={Extraction of natural-language dates and comparison of dates in hypothesis and text to identify negative textual entailment}, url={https://ils.unc.edu/MSpapers/3403.pdf}, journal={University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill}, publisher={School of Information and Library Science}, author={Orphanides, Andreas K}, year={2008}, month={Apr} } @inproceedings{blake_kampov_orphanides_west_lown_2007, title={Unc-ch at duc 2007: Query expansion, lexical simplification and sentence selection strategies for multi-document summarization}, booktitle={Proceedings of Document Understanding Conference (DUC) Workshop}, author={Blake, Catherine and Kampov, Julia and Orphanides, Andreas K and West, David and Lown, Cory}, year={2007} }