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Galaxy of News - An Approach to Visualizing and Understanding Expansive News Landscapes (1994)

by Earl Rennison
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Cat-a-Cone: An Interactive Interface for Specifying Searches and Viewing Retrieval Results using a Large Category Hierarchy

by Marti A. Hearst, Chandu Karadi , 1997
"... This paper introduces a novel user interface that integrates search and browsing of very large category hierarchies with their associated text collections. A key component is the separate but simultaneous display of the representations of the categories and the retrieved documents. Another key compo ..."
Abstract - Cited by 92 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
This paper introduces a novel user interface that integrates search and browsing of very large category hierarchies with their associated text collections. A key component is the separate but simultaneous display of the representations of the categories and the retrieved documents. Another key component is the display ofmultiple selected categories simultaneously, complete with their hierarchical context. The prototype implementation uses animation and a three-dimensional graphical workspace to accommodate the category hierarchy and to store intermediate search results. Query specification in this 3D environment is accomplished via a novel method for painting Boolean queries over a combination of category labels and free text. Examples are shown on a collection of medical text.

Information retrieval on the Web

by Mei Kobayashi, Koichi Takeda - ACM Computing Surveys , 2000
"... In this paper we review studies of the growth of the Internet and technologies that are useful for information search and retrieval on the Web. We present data on the Internet from several different sources, e.g., current as well as projected number of users, hosts, and Web sites. Although numerical ..."
Abstract - Cited by 58 (0 self) - Add to MetaCart
In this paper we review studies of the growth of the Internet and technologies that are useful for information search and retrieval on the Web. We present data on the Internet from several different sources, e.g., current as well as projected number of users, hosts, and Web sites. Although numerical figures vary, overall trends cited

Visualization of Search Results: A Comparative Evaluation of Text, 2D, and 3D Interfaces

by Marc M. Sebrechts, Joanna Vasilakis, Michael S. Miller, John V. Cugini, Sharon J. Laskowski , 1999
"... Although there have been many prototypes of visualization in support of information retrieval, there has been little systematic evaluation that distinguishes the benefits of the visualization per se from that of various accompanying features. The current study focuses on such an evaluation of NIRVE, ..."
Abstract - Cited by 54 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
Although there have been many prototypes of visualization in support of information retrieval, there has been little systematic evaluation that distinguishes the benefits of the visualization per se from that of various accompanying features. The current study focuses on such an evaluation of NIRVE, a tool that supports visualization of search results. Insofar as possible, functionally equivalent 3D, 2D, and text versions of NIRVE were implemented. Nine novices and six professional users completed a series of information-seeking tasks on a set of retrieved documents. There were high interface costs for the 3D visualization, although those costs decreased substantially with experience. Performance was best when the tool's properties matched task demands; only under the right combination of task, user, and interface did 3D visualization result in performance comparable to functionally matched 2D and textual tools. Keywords Information Visualization, 3D, 2D, text, Evaluation, Interface ...

Floor Control for Multimedia Conferencing and Collaboration

by Hans-peter Dommel, J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves , 1997
"... . Floor control allows users of networked multimedia applications to utilize and share resources such as remote devices, distributed data sets, telepointers, or continuous media such as video and audio without access conflicts. Floors are temporary permissions granted dynamically to collaborating us ..."
Abstract - Cited by 53 (6 self) - Add to MetaCart
. Floor control allows users of networked multimedia applications to utilize and share resources such as remote devices, distributed data sets, telepointers, or continuous media such as video and audio without access conflicts. Floors are temporary permissions granted dynamically to collaborating users in order to mitigate race conditions and guarantee mutually exclusive resource usage. A general framework for floor control is presented. Collaborative environments are characterized and the requirements for realization of floor control will be identified. The differences to session control, as well as concurrency control and access control are elicited. Based upon a brief taxonomy of collaboration-relevant parameters, system design issues for floor control are discussed. Floor control mechanisms are discerned from service policies and principal architectures of collaborative systems are compared. The structure of control packets and an application programmer's interface are proposed and...

Visualizing Implicit Queries For Information Management and Retrieval

by Mary Czerwinski , Susan Dumais, George Robertson, Susan Dziadosz, Scott Tiernan, Maarten van Dantzich - IN PROCEEDINGS OF CHI'99 , 1999
"... In this paper, we describe the use of similarity metrics in a novel visual environment for storing and retrieving favorite web pages. The similarity metrics, called Implicit Queries, are used to automatically highlight stored web pages that are related to the currently selected web page. Two experim ..."
Abstract - Cited by 20 (4 self) - Add to MetaCart
In this paper, we describe the use of similarity metrics in a novel visual environment for storing and retrieving favorite web pages. The similarity metrics, called Implicit Queries, are used to automatically highlight stored web pages that are related to the currently selected web page. Two experiments explored how users manage their personal web information space with and without the Implicit Query highlighting and later retrieve their stored web pages. When storing and organizing web pages, users with Implicit Query highlighting generated slightly more categories. Implicit Queries also led to faster web page retrieval time, although the results were not statistically significant.

Facetmap: A scalable search and browse visualization

by Greg Smith, Mary Czerwinski, Brian Meyers, Daniel Robbins, George Robertson, Desney S. Tan - IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics
"... Abstract — The dominant paradigm for searching and browsing large data stores is text-based: presenting a scrollable list of search results in response to textual search term input. While this works well for the Web, there is opportunity for improvement in the domain of personal information stores, ..."
Abstract - Cited by 15 (1 self) - Add to MetaCart
Abstract — The dominant paradigm for searching and browsing large data stores is text-based: presenting a scrollable list of search results in response to textual search term input. While this works well for the Web, there is opportunity for improvement in the domain of personal information stores, which tend to have more heterogeneous data and richer metadata. In this paper, we introduce FacetMap, an interactive, query-driven visualization, generalizable to a wide range of metadata-rich data stores. FacetMap uses a visual metaphor for both input (selection of metadata facets as filters) and output. Results of a user study provide insight into tradeoffs between FacetMap’s graphical approach and the traditional text-oriented approach. Index Terms — Graphical visualization, interactive information retrieval, faceted metadata 1

The use of categories and clusters for organizing retrieval results

by Marti A. Hearst - Natural Language Information Retrieval , 1999
"... Abstract. An important problem for information access systems is that of organizing large sets of documents that have been retrieved in response to a query. Text categorization and text clustering are two natural language processing tasks whose results can be applied to document organization. This c ..."
Abstract - Cited by 14 (1 self) - Add to MetaCart
Abstract. An important problem for information access systems is that of organizing large sets of documents that have been retrieved in response to a query. Text categorization and text clustering are two natural language processing tasks whose results can be applied to document organization. This chapter describes user interfaces that use categories and clusters to organize retrieval results, and examines the relationship between the two. 1 1.

Visualization of search results in document retrieval systems, General Examination Report

by Oren Zamir - University of Washington, SIGTRS Bulletin , 1998
"... Traditional information retrieval systems present search results as a ranked list of documents, ordered by their estimated relevance to the query. Visualization of search results is emerging as a powerful tool for presenting more information to the user in a way that is both intuitive and easy to in ..."
Abstract - Cited by 13 (1 self) - Add to MetaCart
Traditional information retrieval systems present search results as a ranked list of documents, ordered by their estimated relevance to the query. Visualization of search results is emerging as a powerful tool for presenting more information to the user in a way that is both intuitive and easy to interpret. This paper describes the various visualization techniques, and presents a novel classification of these methods. Next it discusses several of the important issues concerning these techniques: how they are evaluated, how they scale to large document sets, can they be combined, and will we see them in practice on the Web anytime soon. 1

Zoetrope: Interacting with the Ephemeral Web

by Eytan Adar, Mira Dontcheva, James Fogarty, Daniel S. Weld
"... The Web is ephemeral. Pages change frequently, and it is nearly impossible to find data or follow a link after the underlying page evolves. We present Zoetrope, a system that enables interaction with the historical Web (pages, links, and embedded data) that would otherwise be lost to time. Using a n ..."
Abstract - Cited by 13 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
The Web is ephemeral. Pages change frequently, and it is nearly impossible to find data or follow a link after the underlying page evolves. We present Zoetrope, a system that enables interaction with the historical Web (pages, links, and embedded data) that would otherwise be lost to time. Using a number of novel interactions, the temporal Web can be manipulated, queried, and analyzed from the context of familar pages. Zoetrope is based on a set of operators for manipulating content streams. We describe these primitives and the associated indexing strategies for handling temporal Web data. They form the basis of Zoetrope and enable our construction of new temporal interactions and visualizations. ACM Classification: H5.2 [Information interfaces and

The Shape of Shakespeare: Visualizing Text Using Implicit Surfaces

by Randall M. Rohrer, William Shakespeare , 1998
"... Information visualization focuses on the use of visual means for exploring non-visual information. While free-form text is a rich, common source of information, visualization of text is a challenging problem since text is inherently non-spatial. This paper explores the use of implicit surface models ..."
Abstract - Cited by 10 (1 self) - Add to MetaCart
Information visualization focuses on the use of visual means for exploring non-visual information. While free-form text is a rich, common source of information, visualization of text is a challenging problem since text is inherently non-spatial. This paper explores the use of implicit surface models for visualizing text. We describe several techniques for text visualization that aid in understanding document content and document relationships. A simple method is defined for mapping document content to shape. By comparing the shapes of multiple documents, global content similarities and differences may be noted. In addition, we describe a visual clustering method in which documents are arranged in 3D based upon similarity scoring. Documents deemed closely related blend together as a single connected shape. Hence, a document corpus becomes a collection of shapes that reflect inter-document relationships. These techniques provide methods to visualize individual documents as well as corpus...
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