Author: S. R. Gulliver
Dr. Stephen R. Gulliver is a Lecturer in the School of Information Systems, Computing and Mathematics at Brunel University, West London, UK. He received a BEng. (Hons) degree in Microelectronics, an MSc. degree (Distributed Information Systems) and a PhD in 1999, 2001, and 2004 respectively. His research interests cover human factors and include the perceptual, usability, accessibility, and information acquisition aspects of computer and multimedia systems. Current studies incorporate eye-tracking, 3D model realisation, attention analysis, and display adaptation.
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Publications
Gulliver, S. R., Serif, T., Ghinea, G. (2004): Pervasive and standalone computing: the perceptual effects of variable multimedia quality. In International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, 60 (5) pp. 640-665.
Gulliver, S. R., Ghinea, G. (2003): How level and type of deafness affect user perception of multimedia video clips. In Universal Access in the Information Society, 2 (4) pp. 374-386. https://www.springerlink.com/openurl.asp?genre=article&issn=1615-5289&volume=2&issue=4&spage=374
Gulliver, S. R., Ghinea, G. (2003): Multimedia Clip Type: Quality of Perception Impact on Users With and Without Hearing Loss. In: Stephanidis, Constantine (eds.) Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction June 22-27, 2003, Crete, Greece. pp. 970-974.