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Hiroshi Ishii (石井 裕, Ishii Hiroshi, born 1956) is a Japanese computer scientist. He is a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Ishii pioneered the Tangible User Interface in the field of Human-computer interaction with the paper "Tangible Bits: Towards Seamless Interfaces between People, Bits and Atoms",[1] co-authored with his then PhD student Brygg Ullmer.
Biography
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Ishii was born in Tokyo and raised in Sapporo. He received B.E. in electronic engineering, and M.E. and Ph.D. in computer engineering from Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan.[2]
Hiroshi Ishii founded the Tangible Media Group and started their ongoing Tangible Bits project in 1995, when he joined the MIT Media Laboratory as a professor of Media Arts and Sciences.[3] Ishii relocated from Japan's NTT Human Interface Laboratories in Yokosuka, where he had made his mark in Human Computer Interaction (HCI) and Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) in the early 1990s.[4] Ishii was elected to the CHI Academy in 2006. He was named to the 2022 class of ACM Fellows, "for contributions to tangible user interfaces and to human-computer interaction".[5]
He currently teaches[2] the class MAS.834 Tangible Interfaces at the Media Lab.
External links
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- ↑ Ishii, Hiroshi; Ullmer, Brygg (1997). "Tangible bits". Proceedings of the ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human factors in computing systems. pp. 234–241. doi:10.1145/258549.258715. ISBN 0897918029. S2CID 462228.
- 1 2 "Tangible Media Group | Hiroshi Ishii".
- ↑ Schenker, Jennifer L. "Interview Of The Week: Hiroshi Ishii, MIT Multimedia Lab". The Innovator. Retrieved July 18, 2023.
- ↑ "HorizonZero Issue 03 : INVENT". www.horizonzero.ca. Archived from the original on October 10, 2006.
- ↑ "Global computing association names 57 fellows for outstanding contributions that propel technology today". Association for Computing Machinery. January 18, 2023. Retrieved January 18, 2023.