insight generation, and just about anything that humans, as intelligent beings, seek to do. We've used the term computing for human experience (CHE) 1 to capture technology's human-centric role. CHE emphasizes the unobtrusive, supportive,...
moreinsight generation, and just about anything that humans, as intelligent beings, seek to do. We've used the term computing for human experience (CHE) 1 to capture technology's human-centric role. CHE emphasizes the unobtrusive, supportive, and assistive part technology plays in improving human experience; here, technology "takes into account the human world and allows computers themselves to disappear in the background." 2 We can distinguish this from Licklider's vision of human-computer collaboration, Eglebert's vision of augmenting human intellect and-more recently-ambient intelligence, and Vannever Bush's and McCarthy's machine-centric vision of making computing more intelligent so that it thinks and behaves like humans.