|
Professor
Supervisor of Doctorate Candidates
Supervisor of Master's Candidates
Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) is an interdisciplinary field that studies information exchange, behavioral collaboration, and experience optimization between humans and computing systems. It integrates multiple fields such as computer science, design, psychology, cognitive science, and engineering. Its core objective is to understand the characteristics and needs of humans in the processes of perception, cognition, decision-making, and behavioral execution, and to design more natural, efficient, safe, and experiential interactive technologies and systems. With the development of artificial intelligence, virtual reality, augmented reality, wearable devices, and robotics, the research object of HCI has expanded from traditional graphical interfaces to new forms such as three-dimensional spatial interaction, multimodal interaction, embodied interaction, and human-computer collaborative intelligence. Currently, HCI research not only focuses on "how to make systems easier to use," but also emphasizes "how to make systems understand, adapt to, and collaborate with humans," which has significant theoretical and applied value in fields such as intelligent manufacturing, healthcare, education and training, cultural and creative industries, and remote work.