Catherine Beaton Headshot

Catherine Beaton

Associate Professor, School of Information

School of Information
Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences

5852816162
Office Hours
T/R 12:30 pm - 2: 30 pm or by appointment
Office Location
Office Mailing Address
70-2621

Catherine Beaton

Associate Professor, School of Information

School of Information
Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences

Education

BA, B.Ed., MITE, Dalhousie University (Canada)

5852816162

Personal Links
Areas of Expertise

Select Scholarship

Published Conference Proceedings
Beaton, Catherine and Ronald, P. Vullo, Ph.D. "Don\'t Push that Button!!" Proceedings of the CEPE/ETHICOMP June 2017, Torino Italy. Ed. Bernd Stahl. Leicester, UK: Oribit, 2017. Web.
Beaton, Catherine and Ronald P Vullo. "Wisdom of Crowds or Mob Mentality." Proceedings of the ECSM July 2014. Ed. Sue Nugis. Brighton, uk: n.p., Web.
Beaton, Catherine. "Do We Owe Them? The Impact of e-Learning on Disadvantaged Populations." Proceedings of the European Conference on e-Learning, Oct 26-27, 2012 Groningen, NL. Ed. Dr. Hans Beldhuis. Nr Reading, United Kingdom: Academic Publishing International Limited, Print.
Journal Paper
Vullo, Ronald P., et al. "Can You Read What I'm Saying?" Proceedings of the International Conference on e-Learning, e-Business, Enterprise Information Systems, and e-Government. (2016): 41-47. Web.

Currently Teaching

HCIN-610
3 Credits
Human-computer interaction (HCI) is a field of study concerned with the design, evaluation and implementation of interactive computing systems for human use and with the study of major phenomena surrounding them. This course surveys the scope of issues and foundations of the HCI field: cognitive psychology, human factors, interaction styles, user analysis, task analysis, interaction design methods and techniques, and evaluation. This course will focus on the users and their tasks.
ISTE-260
3 Credits
The user experience is an important design element in the development of interactive systems. This course presents the foundations of user-centered design principles within the context of human-computer interaction (HCI). Students will explore and practice HCI methods that span the development lifecycle from requirements analysis and creating the product/service vision through system prototyping and usability testing. Leading edge interface technologies are examined. Group-based exercises and design projects are required.