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32
ScentTrails: Integrating Browsing and Searching on the Web
- ACM TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTER-HUMAN INTERACTION
, 2003
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Designing a Digital Library for Young Children: An Intergenerational Partnership
- In Proceedings of Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL 2001) ACM
, 2001
"... As more information resources become accessible using computers, our digital interfaces to those resources need to be appropriate for all people. However when it comes to digital libraries, the interfaces have typically been designed for older children or adults. Therefore, we have begun to develop ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 47 (25 self)
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As more information resources become accessible using computers, our digital interfaces to those resources need to be appropriate for all people. However when it comes to digital libraries, the interfaces have typically been designed for older children or adults. Therefore, we have begun to develop a digital library interface developmentally appropriate for young children (ages 5-10 years old). Our prototype system we now call "QueryKids" offers a graphical interface for querying, browsing and reviewing search results. This paper describes our motivation for the research, the design partnership we established between children and adults, our design process, the technology outcomes of our current work, and the lessons we have learned. Keywords Children, digital libraries, information retrieval design techniques, education applications, participatory design, cooperative inquiry, intergenerational design team, zoomable user interfaces (ZUIs). THE NEED FOR RESEARCH A growing body of k...
Use of Multiple Digital Libraries: A Case Study
- In Proc. JCDL 2001
, 2001
"... The aim of the work reported here was to better understand the usability issues raised when digital libraries are used in a natural setting. The method used was a protocol analysis of users working on a task of their own choosing to retrieve documents from publicly available digital libraries. V ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 38 (16 self)
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The aim of the work reported here was to better understand the usability issues raised when digital libraries are used in a natural setting. The method used was a protocol analysis of users working on a task of their own choosing to retrieve documents from publicly available digital libraries. Various classes of usability difficulties were found. Here, we focus on use in context --- that is, usability concerns that arise from the fact that libraries are accessed in particular ways, under technically and organisationally imposed constraints, and that use of any particular resource is discretionary. The concepts from an Interaction Framework, which provides support for reasoning about patterns of interaction between users and systems, are applied to understand interaction issues. Keywords Digital Libraries, video protocols, interaction modelling, HCI. 1.
Magnet: Supporting Navigation in Semistructured Data
- In SIGMOD
, 2005
"... With the growing importance of systems containing arbitrary semistructured relationships, the need for supporting users searching in such repositories has grown. Currently support for users' search needs either has required domain-specific user interfaces or has required users to be schema experts. ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 24 (4 self)
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With the growing importance of systems containing arbitrary semistructured relationships, the need for supporting users searching in such repositories has grown. Currently support for users' search needs either has required domain-specific user interfaces or has required users to be schema experts. We have developed a generalpurpose tool that offers users helpful navigation and refinement options for seeking information in these semistructured repositories. We show how a tool can be built without requiring domain-specific assumptions about the information being explored. In addition to describing a general approach to the problem, we provide a set of natural, general-purpose refinement tactics, many generalized from past work on textual information retrieval.
Exploring Digital Libraries: Integrating Browsing, Searching, and Visualization
- In Proceedings of the 6th ACM/IEEE-CS Joint Conference on Digital libraries
, 2006
"... Exploring services for digital libraries (DLs) include two major paradigms, browsing and searching, as well as other services such as clustering and visualization. In this paper, we formalize and generalize DL exploring services within a DL theory. We develop theorems to indicate that browsing and s ..."
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Cited by 9 (3 self)
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Exploring services for digital libraries (DLs) include two major paradigms, browsing and searching, as well as other services such as clustering and visualization. In this paper, we formalize and generalize DL exploring services within a DL theory. We develop theorems to indicate that browsing and searching can be converted or mapped to each other under certain conditions. The theorems guide the design and implementation of exploring services for an integrated archaeological DL, ETANA-DL. Its integrated browsing and searching can support users in moving seamlessly between these operations, minimizing context switching, and keeping users focused. It also integrates browsing and searching into a single visual interface for DL exploration. A user study to evaluate ETANA-DL’s exploring services helped validate our hypotheses.
Visualization of heterogeneous data
- IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics
, 2007
"... Abstract — Both the Resource Description Framework (RDF), used in the semantic web, and Maya Viz u-forms represent data as a graph of objects connected by labeled edges. Existing systems for flexible visualization of this kind of data require manual specification of the possible visualization roles ..."
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Cited by 9 (2 self)
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Abstract — Both the Resource Description Framework (RDF), used in the semantic web, and Maya Viz u-forms represent data as a graph of objects connected by labeled edges. Existing systems for flexible visualization of this kind of data require manual specification of the possible visualization roles for each data attribute. When the schema is large and unfamiliar, this requirement inhibits exploratory visualization by requiring a costly up-front data integration step. To eliminate this step, we propose an automatic technique for mapping data attributes to visualization attributes. We formulate this as a schema matching problem, finding appropriate paths in the data model for each required visualization attribute in a visualization template. Index Terms—Data integration, RDF, attribute inference. 1
Personalized Navigation of Heterogeneous Product Spaces using SmartClient
- in Proceedings of the International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces
, 2002
"... Personalization in e-commerce has so far been servercentric, allowing users to create individual profiles on servers that can be later accessed. However, as more product information is coming from multiple and heterogeneous sources, it is impossible for users to create many profiles. We present Smar ..."
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Cited by 8 (4 self)
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Personalization in e-commerce has so far been servercentric, allowing users to create individual profiles on servers that can be later accessed. However, as more product information is coming from multiple and heterogeneous sources, it is impossible for users to create many profiles. We present SmartClient, a technology based on constraint programming where a thin but intelligent client provides a personalized information access for its users. As the process can run on the user's side, it allows much stronger filtering and visualization support with a wider range of personalization options than existing tools. It also eliminates the need to personalize many sites individually with different parameters, and supports product configuration and integration of different information sources in the same framework. We illustrate the technology using an application in travel e-commerce, which is currently under commercial deployment.
From keyword search to exploration: How result visualization aids discovery on the web. Human-Computer Interaction Lab
, 2008
"... A key to the Web's success is the power of search. The elegant way in which search results are returned is usually remarkably effective. However, for exploratory search in which users need to learn, discover, and understand novel or complex topics, there is substantial room for improvement. Human co ..."
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Cited by 8 (1 self)
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A key to the Web's success is the power of search. The elegant way in which search results are returned is usually remarkably effective. However, for exploratory search in which users need to learn, discover, and understand novel or complex topics, there is substantial room for improvement. Human computer interaction researchers and web browser designers have developed novel strategies to improve Web search by enabling users to conveniently visualize, manipulate, and organize their Web search results. This monograph offers fresh ways to think about search-related cognitive processes and describes innovative design approaches to browsers and related tools. For instance, while key word search presents users with results for specific information (e.g., what is the capitol of Peru), other methods may let users see and explore the contexts of their requests for information (related or previous work, conflicting information), or the properties that associate groups of information assets (group legal decisions by lead attorney).
The International Children's Digital Library: Viewing Digital Books Online
- Journal of Human-Computer Interaction
"... Reading books plays an important role in children's cognitive and social development. However, many children do not have access to diverse collections of books due to the limited resources of their community libraries. We have begun to address this issue by creating a large-scale digital archive of ..."
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Cited by 7 (1 self)
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Reading books plays an important role in children's cognitive and social development. However, many children do not have access to diverse collections of books due to the limited resources of their community libraries. We have begun to address this issue by creating a large-scale digital archive of children's books, the International Children's Digital Library (ICDL). In this paper we discuss our initial efforts in building the ICDL, concentrating on an informal evaluation of innovative digital book readers.
Design space of personalized indexing: Enhancing successive web searching for transmuting information problems (pp. 1092–1100
- In Proceedings of the Eighth Americas Conference on Information Systems (pp. 1092–1100). Atlanta, GA: Association for Information Systems
"... Successive searches are very common search behavior in online shopping, Intranet information retrieval and other ordinary information seeking contexts. This study unveils the design space of Personalized Indexing (PI), a tool that supports successive searches for information problems that evolve ove ..."
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Cited by 5 (0 self)
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Successive searches are very common search behavior in online shopping, Intranet information retrieval and other ordinary information seeking contexts. This study unveils the design space of Personalized Indexing (PI), a tool that supports successive searches for information problems that evolve over sessions. An empirical user study on a representative task of transmuting information problems in the Web context was conducted to evaluate PI. The preliminary result of this user study is briefly reported, confirming that PI does support the searchers well in the problematic areas of the information seeking process it intends to address.

