Theseus at CHI 2014

Joel Brandt, Robert C. Miller, and I wrote about Theseus and always-on programming tools. It was accepted at CHI in 2014 and I presented it in Toronto.

Photo courtesy Juho Kim, a swell guy

Paper

Addressing Misconceptions About Code with Always-On Programming Visualizations (PDF)

I took the time between paper acceptance and the conference talk to refine our message, so the slides below are probably where I would start if I were you.

Click here to reveal citation information »

Lieber, Tom, Joel Brandt, and Robert C. Miller. “Addressing Misconceptions About Code with Always-On Programming Visualizations.” CHI 2014. @inproceedings{Lieber:2014:AMC:2556288.2557409, author = {Lieber, Tom and Brandt, Joel and Miller, Robert C.}, title = {Addressing Misconceptions About Code with Always-on Programming Visualizations}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems}, series = {CHI '14}, year = {2014}, isbn = {978-1-4503-2473-1}, location = {Toronto, Ontario, Canada}, pages = {2481--2490}, numpages = {10}, url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2556288.2557409}, doi = {10.1145/2556288.2557409}, acmid = {2557409}, publisher = {ACM}, address = {New York, NY, USA}, keywords = {code understanding, debugging, programming}, }

Conference Presentation

You can also get the slides (without notes) as PDF.

Introduction and Motivation

Framing Our Research

Presenting Theseus

Design Principles

Research Question

Evaluation 1

Evaluation 2

Future Work

Take-Aways