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Canadian Human Computer Communications Society
Société Canadienne du Dialogue Humaine Machine Ronald M. Baecker 2005 Achievement Award |
Ronald Baecker has played a pioneering role in almost every aspect of the
community that comprises the Canadian Human-Computer Communications
Society. He is internationally recognized for his insights on the
importance of interactivity and careful attention to user-centred design.
Often he has seen emerging issues well ahead of others and provided
leadership by initiating research activity in new areas that have set the
agenda for those who followed.
The many accomplishments for which he is receiving the CHCCS Achievement
Award include: establishing with his colleagues at the University of
Toronto the
Dynamic Graphics Project
as the first (and many would say the
foremost) Canadian university research group focused on computer graphics
and human-computer interaction; producing in 1981 one of the first and
perhaps the most famous animated algorithm visualizations, the
computer-generated film
Sorting
Out Sorting;
co-chairing and naming Graphics
Interface '82, the event that transformed the former CMCCS conference to
an annual conference with a wider constituency than just interactive
computer graphics; co-founding in 1989 the CAVECAT research project
and in 1992 the
Ontario Telepresence
Project,
which were
testbeds for many ideas that are now common practice in computer-supported
cooperative work; and organizing the
Network
for Effective Collaboration Technologies through Advanced Research,
a new Canadian research network.
The opportunities created by these initiatives, and Dr. Baecker's vision of interactive technology as a key enabler, have been instrumental in establishing and maintaining Canada's position as a world leader in the fields of computer graphics, visualization, human-computer interaction, and computer-supported cooperative work. These and similar initiatives spanning more than four decades have provided inspiration for students, colleagues, and the international research community.
Dr. Baecker is Bell University Laboratories Professor of Human-Computer Interaction, Professor of Computer Science, and founder and Chief Scientist of the Knowledge Media Design Institute at the University of Toronto. He holds cross appointments in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Faculty of Management. He received his B.Sc., M.Sc., and Ph.D. degrees from M.I.T. His Ph.D. topic led to the first comprehensive conceptual framework for computer animation and the first significant interactive computer animation system. Dr. Baecker joined the University of Toronto in 1972 after working at the National Institutes for Health in the United States.
A partial list of his many research contributions includes the Genesys picture-driven animation system described in his doctoral dissertation (1969), the Shazam interactive animation system developed with researchers at Xerox PARC, the Newswhole interactive newspaper layout system designed with David Tilbrook (1976), a multi-window interactive graphical debugger developed with Sheila Crossey (1977), the See source code visualization project with Aaron Marcus (1983), the VANNA video annotation tools with Beverly Harrison (1992), research on collaborative writing with Ilona Posner and Alex Mitchell in the early 90s, the MAD movie authoring system for children with Alan Rosenthal, Eric Smith, and Ilona Posner in the mid-90s, and the ePresence open source interactive webcasting and archiving system with Peter Wolf, Gale Moore, and Kelly Rankin in the beginning years of this millenium.
Baecker is an active researcher, lecturer, and consultant on human-computer interaction and user interface design, user support, software visualization, multimedia, computer-supported cooperative work and learning, the Internet, entrepreneurship and strategic planning in the software industry, and the role of information technology in business. He has published over 100 papers and articles on topics in these areas, and is the author or co-author of two published videotapes and four books including three edited collections of readings in human-computer interaction and computer-supported cooperative work. He is co-holder of two patents and one patent pending. Baecker was the founder, CEO, and Chairman of HCR Corporation, a Toronto-based UNIX contract R&D and technology development and marketing firm, sold in 1990 to the Santa Cruz Operation. He was also the founder of Expresto Software Corp, a firm specializing in structured visual communication explaining software and other complex technology. Expresto Software was sold in 2002 to Caseware International. He has been recognized by ACM SIGGRAPH as a "Graphics Pioneer" for his contributions to interactive computer graphics and he has been inducted into the ACM ACM SIGCHI Academy for his contributions to the field of human-computer interaction.
Photograph by Louis Fabian Bachrach.