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G.W.Matthias Rauterberg |
Curriculum Vitae:
G.W. Matthias Rauterberg received a B.S. in Psychology (1978) at the
University of Marburg (Germany), a B.A. in Philosophy (1981) and a
B.S. in Computer Science (1983), a M.S. in Psychology (1981) and a
M.S. in Computer Science (1986) at the University of Hamburg
(Germany), and a Ph.D. in Computer Science/ Mathematics (1995) at the
University of Zurich (Switzerland). He was a senior lecturer for
'usability engineering' in computer science and industrial engineering
at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich, where
later he was heading the Man-Machine Interaction research group
(MMI). Since 1998 he is fulltime professor for 'Human Communication
Technology' first at IPO, Center for User System Interaction Research,
and later at the Department of Industrial Design at the Eindhoven
University of Technology (TU/e, The Netherlands). From 1999 till 2001
he was director of IPO. He is now the head of the Designed
Intelligence research group at the Department of Industrial Design of
the TU/e.
He was the Swiss representative in the IFIP TC13 on 'Human Computer
Interaction' (1994-2002) and the chairman of the IFIP WG13.1 on 'HCI
and Education' (1998-2004). He is now the Dutch representative in the
IFIP TC14 on 'Entertainment Computing' and the founding vice-chair of
this TC14 (since 2006). He is also the chair of the IFIP WG14.3 on
'Entertainment Theory' (since 2004). He is also appointed as visiting
professor at Kwansei Gakuin University (Japan) (2004-2007). He
received the German GI-HCI Award for the best Ph.D. in 1997 and the
Swiss Technology Award for the BUILD-IT system in 1998.
Since 2004 he is a nominated member of the 'Cream of Science' in the
Netherlands (the 200 top-level Dutch researchers) and amongst the 10
top-level TU/e scientists. He has over 250 publications in
international journals, conference proceedings, books, etc. He acts
also as editor and member of the editorial board of several leading
international journals.
Main Research Interests:
- entertainment computing
- cognitive systems
- human-computer interaction
- design science
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