%% Books (abbreviated titles) %%
@String{ARIST = "{Annual Review of Information Science and Technology}"}
@String{SofT = "The Society of Text: Hypertext, Hypermedia, and the
Social Construction of Information"}
@String{HTPsyP = "Hypertext: A Psychological Perspective"}
@String{HTTiP = "Hypertext: Theory Into Practice"}
@String{CHVT = "The {C}ambridge Handbook of Visuospatial Thinking"}
%% Journals (abbreviated titles) %%
@String{cacm = "Communications of the {ACM}"}
@String{compsurv = "{ACM} Computer Surveys"}
@String{DDJ = "{Dr. Dobbs Journal}"}
@String{EP-odd = "Electronic Publishing --- Origination, Dissemination and
Design"}
@String{e4d = "Eye For Design"}
@String{ijmms = "International Journal of Man-Machine Studies"}
@String{ijhcs = "International Journal of Human-Computer Studies"}
@string{int = "{interactions}"}
@String{ipm = "Information Processing \& Management"}
@String{isdn = "Computer Networks and {ISDN} Systems"}
@String{jasis = "Journal of the American Society for Information Science"}
@String{jasist = "Journal of the American Society for Information
Science and Technology"}
@String{jdoc = "The Journal of Documentation"}
@String{JEHM = "Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia"}
@String{JoDI = "Journal of Digital Information (JoDI)"}
@String{NRHM = "The New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia"}
@String{PNAS = "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences"}
@String{tochi = "{ACM} Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction"}
@String{tois = "{ACM} Transactions on Information Systems"}
@String{sciam = "Scientific American"}
@String{sigir = "{ACM} {SIGIR} Forum"}
@String{sigois = "{ACM} {SIGOIS} Bulletin"}
@String{SSR = "Scientific Studies of Reading"}
@String{TCHI = "{ACM} Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction"}
%% Proceedings (abbreviated titles) %%
@String{CRIWG02 = "{CRIWG} '02: Proceedings of the 8th International Workshop
on Groupware: Design, Implementation and Use"}
@String{DL98 = "Proceedings of the Third {ACM} Conference on Digital
Libraries"}
@String{HT87 = "Hypertext '87 Papers"}
@String{HT89 = "Hypertext '89 Proceedings"}
@String{ECHT90 = "{Hypertext: Concepts, Systems and Applications}"}
@String{HT91 = "Hypertext '91 Proceedings"}
@String{ECHT92 = "ACM European Conference on Hypertext '92 Proceedings"}
@String{HT93 = "Hypertext '93 Proceedings"}
@String{ECHT94 = "ACM European Conference on Hypertext '94 Proceedings"}
@String{HT95 = "Hypertext '95 Proceedings"}
@String{HT96 = "{Hypertext '96 The Seventh ACM Conference on Hypertext}"}
@String{HT98 = "{Hypertext '98: The Proceedings of the Ninth ACM
Conference on Hypertext and Hypermedia}"}
@String{HT99 = "{Hypertext '99: Returning to Our Diverse Roots The
10th {ACM} Conference on Hypertext and Hypermedia}"}
@String{HT2K = "{HT '00: Proceedings of teh Eleventh ACM Conference of
Hypertext and Hypermedia}"}
@String{HT06 = "{HYPERTEXT} '06: Proceedings of the seventeenth
conference on Hypertext and hypermedia"}
@String{HT07 = "{HT}\,'07: Proceedings of the 18th conference on Hypertext
and hypermedia"}
@String{HT2010 = "{HT}\,'10: Proceedings of the 21st ACM conference on
Hypertext and hypermedia"}
@String{HTSt = "{Proceedings of the Hypertext Standardization Workshop}"}
@String{Info90 = "{Information 90: Proceedings of the Third International
Conference}"}
@String{SIGCHI86 = "{CHI '86 Proceedings}"}
@String{SIGCHI88 = "{Human factors in computing systems CHI '88 conference
Proceedings}"}
@String{SIGCHI89 = "{CHI '89 `Wings for the Mind'}"}
@String{SIGCHI90 = "{Empowering People: {CHI} '90 Conference Proceedings}"}
@String{SIGCHI91 = "{Human Factors in Computing Systems Reaching Through
Technology CHI~'91 Conference Proceedings}"}
@String{SIGCHI97 = "Looking to the Future: Proceedings of the {CHI} 97
Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems"}
@String{SIGCHI98 = "Making the Impossible Possible: {CHI 98} Human Factors
in Computing Systems Conference Proceedings"}
@String{SIGCHI2K = "{CHI} 2000 Conference Proceedings"}
@String{SIGCHI05 = "{CHI} '05: Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on
Human factors in computing systems"}
@String{SIGIR81 = "{SIGIR '81}"}
@String{SIGIR85 = "{SIGIR '85}"}
@String{SIGIR86 = "{SIGIR '86}"}
@String{SIGIR87 = "{SIGIR '87}"}
@String{SIGIR90 = "{SIGIR '90}"}
@String{SIGIR91 = "{SIGIR '91}"}
@String{SIGIR92 = "{SIGIR '92}"}
@String{SIGIR93 = "{SIGIR '93}"}
@String{SIGIR94 = "{SIGIR '94}"}
@String{SIGIR95 = "{SIGIR '95}"}
@String{COIS88 = "{Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Office
Information Systems}"}
@String{COIS90 = "{Conference on OIS}"}
@String{BCS-ACM3 = "{Research and Development in Information Retrieval}"}
@String{TR:SA = "{Text Retrieval The State of the Art}"}
@String{AIandHT = "{{AAAI-88} Workshop {AI} and Hypertext: Issues and
Directions}"}
@String{ASIS87 = "{ASIS '87 Proceedings of the 50th Annual Meeting}"}
@String{ASIS88 = "{ASIS '88 Proceedings of the 51st Annual Meeting}"}
@String{ASIS90 = "{ASIS '90 Proceedings of the 51st Annual Meeting}"}
@String{ASIS92 = "{ASIS '92 Proceedings of the 55th Annual Meeting}"}
@String{VLDB90 = "{Proceedings of the $16^{\rm th}$ {VLDB} Conference}"}
@Article{Mo:PDMMD,
Author="Ross Moore",
Title="Preparation of documents for multiple modes of delivery --- Notes
from {TUG}'99",
Journal="TUGBoat: The Communications of the \TeX Users Group",
Volume=20, Number=4, Pages=389#"--"#394, Month=dec, Year=1999,
URL="http://www.tug.org/TUGboat/Articles/tb20-4/tb65moore.pdf",
Keyword="\K{Classic}"
}
@InProceedings{Ha:Content,
Author="Rainer Hammw{\"o}hner and Ulrich Thiel",
Title="Content Oriented Relations between Text Units --- a
Structural Model for Hypertexts",
Pages=155#"--"#176,
BookTitle=HT87, CROSSREF="HT87",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/317426.317439",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen} $\bullet$ \K{System!Semantic network} $\bullet$
\K{database}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Ha:AutoGen}"
}
@InProceedings{Ha:AutoGen,
Author="Udo Hahn and Ulrich Reimer",
Title="Automatic Generation of Hypertext Knowledge Bases",
Pages=182#"--"#188,
BookTitle="Proceedings of the {ACM} Conference on Office
Information Systems",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/45410.45429",
Month="23--25 " # mar, Year=1988,
Address="Palo Alto, CA",
Organization="ACM",
Note="Published in {SIGOIS} Bulletin v.9 \#2--3 ("#apr#"--"#jul#"
1988)",
Annote="`By natural language parsing/semi-recognition,
full-text bases are supplied with an abstraction hierarchy of
so-called text graph concept browsers with hypertextual links.' ---
Nielsen \cite[p.223]{Ni:Bib90}",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen} $\bullet$ \K{AI} $\bullet$ \K{System!TOPIC}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Ha:Content,Cl:VISAR}"
}
@Article{Ha:HTwTOs,
Author="Rainer Hammw{\"o}hner and Rainer Kuhlen",
Title="Semantic Control of Open Hypertext Systems by Typed
Objects",
Journal="Journal of Information Science", Volume=20, Number=3,
Year=1994, Pages=175#"--"#184,
Keyword="\K{System!KHS}"
}
@InProceedings{Gl:E,
Author="Robert J. Glushko",
Title="Transforming Text Into Hypertext for a Compact Disc
Encyclopedia",
BookTitle=SIGCHI89, CROSSREF="CHI89",
Pages=293#"--"#298,
Keyword="\K{Authoring/Conversion}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Sa:AuStLHT}",
Annote="The Compendium workers used programs to identify possible
links in the text. After these links had been identified, people
chose which links to include in the hypertext document. They
were guided in their choices by a model of what they thought
users would want from a hypertext version of an engineering
encyclopaedia."
}
@Article{Co:HTIntro,
Author="Jeff Conklin",
Journal="{IEEE} Computer",
Title="Hypertext: An Introduction and Survey",
Volume=20, Number=9, Year=1987,
Pages=17#"--"#41,
CallNo="TK 7885.A1 I5 v.20 1987 JL-D",
Keyword="\K{HT!Intro} $\bullet$ \K{Classic} $\bullet$ \K{Review}",
Annote="Probably the most cited introductory article about HT",
SeeAlso="unabridged version~\cite{Co:HT}"
}
@InCollection{Co:HT,
Title="Hypertext",
Author="Jeff Conklin",
BookTitle="Encyclopedia of Microcomputers",
Volume=8, Year=1991, Pages=377 # "--" # 432,
Publisher="Marcel Dekker, Inc., N.Y.",
SeeAlso="abridged version in IEEE Computer~\cite{Co:HTIntro}",
Keyword="\K{HT!Intro} $\bullet$ \K{Classic} $\bullet$ \K{Review}"
}
@Article{As:InetU,
Author="Charles Ashley",
Title="Internet Groups Allow for Productive Information
Gathering",
Journal="Online Review",
Volume=16, Number=3, Month=jun, Year=1992,
CallNo="Z699.A10543", ISSN="8756-7040",
Keyword="\K{MSc!Justification}"
}
@InProceedings{Cl:VISAR,
Author="Peter Clitherow and Doug Riecken and Michael
Muller",
Title="{VISAR}: A System for Inference and Navigation in
Hypertext",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/74224.74248",
BookTitle=HT89, CROSSREF="HT89",
Pages=293#"--"#304,
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen} $\bullet$ \K{System!CYC} $\bullet$
\K{AI!CYC system} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation!perhaps?}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Bernstein's Apprentice paper for comments~\cite{Be:App}, and
\item cf TOPIC\cite{Ha:AutoGen},
\item MSc\cite{Bl:MSc} has a summary.
\end{itemize}"
}
@InProceedings{Cr:ClHier,
Author="Donald B.~Crouch and Carolyn J.~Crouch and Glenn
Andreas",
Title="The Use of Cluster Hierarchies in Hypertext
Information Retrieval",
BookTitle=HT89, CROSSREF="HT89",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/74224.74243",
Pages=225#"--"#237,
Keyword="\K{HT!Methodology} $\bullet$ \K{Cluster} $\bullet$
\K{System!SMART} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation}",
SeeAlso="Sounds like \cite{Ha:Content}",
Annote="
\begin{itemize}
\item
a graphical interface to {\sc smart}'s cluster based retrieval
\item Abstract:
`The {\em graph-traversal approach} to HT IR is a
conceptualization of HT in which the structural aspects of the
nodes are emphasized. A user navigates through such HT systems
by evaluating the semantics associated with links between nodes
as well as info contained in nodes. In this paper we describe a
hierarchical struture which effectively supports the graphical
traversal of a document collection in a HT system. We provide an
overview of an interactive browser based on cluster hierachies.
Initial results obtained from the use of the browser in an
experimental HT systems are presented.'
\end{itemize}"
}
@InProceedings{DeR:ExpLs,
Author="Steven J.~{DeRose}",
Title="Expanding the Notion of Links",
BookTitle=HT89, CROSSREF="HT89",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/74224.74245",
Pages=249#"--"#255,
Annote="Hypertext is ideal for documents, citation lists with
more than one structure --- challenge for navigation.",
Keyword="\K{MSc!Justification} $\bullet$ \K{link types!taxonomy of}"
}
@InProceedings{Le:TMI,
Author="Michael Lesk",
Title="What To Do When There's Too Much Information",
BookTitle=HT89, CROSSREF="HT89",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/74224.74249",
Pages=305#"--"#317,
Annote="Abstract: `HT systems with small units of text are likely to
drown the user with information in the same way that online
catalogs or bibliographic retrieval systems often do.
Experiments with a catalogue of 800 000 book citations have shown
two useful ways of dealing with the `too many hits' problem. One
is a display of phrases containing the excessively frequent
words; another is a display of titles by hierarchical category.
The same techniques should apply to other text-based retrieval
systems. In general, interactive solutions seem more promising
than attempts to do detailed query analysis and get things right
the first time.'",
SeeAlso="Sounds like Liwen Qiu's work at Dalhousie~\cite{Wa:DalText}",
Keyword="\K{System Issues}"
}
@InProceedings{Ni:Usab,
Author="Jakob Nielsen",
Title ="The Matters that Really Matter for Hypertext
Usability",
BookTitle=HT89, CROSSREF="HT89",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/74224.74244",
Pages=239#"--"#248,
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item Abstract: `We compare 92 benchmark measuresments of various
usability issues related to HT which have been published in
the HT literature in order to find which ones have shown the
largest effects',
\item p.243--244: individual diffs are big effects:
\item biggest diff is age, second is activity level, type of task
(p.244).
\item dangerous to blindly transfer usability results from one
medium to another.
\end{itemize}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item User Analysis in HCI by Dillon~\cite{Di:UAinHCI} and
\item Chen \& Rada's meta-analysis~\cite{Ch:Meta}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{Classic} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Testing}
$\bullet$ \K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{Usability} $\bullet$
\K{individual differences}"
}
@InProceedings{Co:gIBIS,
Author="Jeff Conklin and Michael L. Begeman",
Title ="{gIBIS}: A Hypertext Tool for Team Design
Deliberation",
BookTitle=HT87, CROSSREF="HT87",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/317426.317444",
Pages=247#"--"#251,
SeeAlso="ACM Trans on OIS v.6 \#4 Oct.~1988,
pp.\,303-331~\cite{Co:gIBIS-TOIS}",
Annote="Experimental system to test graphical interface and design
decisions",
Keyword="\K{System!gIBIS}"
}
@Article{Co:gIBIS-TOIS,
Author="Jeff Conklin and Michael L. Begeman",
Title="{gIBIS}: A Hypertext Tool for Exploratory Policy
Discussion",
Journal=tois, Volume=6, Number=4, Month=oct, Year=1988,
Pages=303#"--"#331,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/58566.59297"
}
@InProceedings{Ra:Hype,
Author="Jeff Raskin",
Title="The Hype in Hypertext: A Critique",
BookTitle=HT87, CROSSREF="HT87",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/317426.317449",
Pages=325#"--"#330,
Annote="A number of user interface and technical problems with HT are
discussed",
Keyword="\K{Design!Decisions}"
}
@InProceedings{Cr:HTandIR,
Author="W.~Bruce Croft and Nicholas Belkin, Marie-France
Bruandet and Rainer Kuhlen and Tim Oren",
Title="Hypertext and Information Retrieval: What Are the
Fundamental Concepts?",
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA",
Pages=362#"--"#366,
Keyword="\K{MSc!Justification}",
Annote="A brief elucidation of the similarities and
differences between HT and IR research and methodologies.
Presents HT as a method for using databases of primarily
text documents",
}
@InProceedings{Be:App,
Author="Mark Bernstein",
Title="An Apprentice That Discovers Hypertext Links",
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA",
Pages=212#"--"#223,
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen} $\bullet$ \K{System!VISAR}",
Annote="Computes dot products of vectors generated from Bloom
filter hashing to discover similar pages in a monograph. This
approach works with `compact, independent hypertext documents which
may be considered to address a single subject, and which are
intended to be read rather than queried.' (p.\,213); comments on
VISAR",
SeeAlso="\cite{Bl:Bloom,Be:App2}"
}
@Unpublished{Be:App2,
Author ="Elli Mylonas and Mark Bernstein",
Title="A Literary Apprentice",
Year=1993,
Note="Submitted to {\em Computing in the Humanities}",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Be:App}"
}
@Article{Pe:THash,
Title="Fast Hashing of Variable-Length Text Strings",
Author="Peter K. Pearson",
Journal=cacm,
Volume=33, Number=6, Month=jun, Year=1990,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/78973.78978",
Pages=677#"--"#680,
Annote="Describes the hashing method Bernstein's link
apprentice~\cite{Be:App,Be:App2} uses.~\cite{M.Bernstein}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Cr:TCTH}",
Keyword="\K{Hashing} $\bullet$ \K{Bloom Filters}"
}
@Article{Cr:TCTH,
Title="Technical Correspondence",
Author="Diane Crawford",
Journal=cacm,
Volume=34, Number=11, Month=nov, Year=1991,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/125490.376050",
Pages=118#"--"#120,
SeeAlso="\cite{Pe:THash}",
Keyword="\K{Hashing} $\bullet$ \K{Bloom Filters}"
}
@Article{Be:BnC,
Author="Mark Bernstein",
Title="The Bookmark and the Compass: Orientation Tools for Hypertext
Users",
Journal="{SIG OIS} Bulletin", Month=oct, Year=1988,
Volume=9, Number=4, Pages=34#"--"#45,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/51640.51645"
}
@InProceedings{Ra:EarOED,
Author="Darrell R. Raymond and Frank Wm. Tompa",
Title="Hypertext and the {New Oxford English Dictionary}",
BookTitle=HT87, CROSSREF="HT87",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/317426.317438",
Pages=143#"--"#153,
SeeAlso="Raymond \& Tompa in CACM 31(7)\cite{Ra:OEDP}",
Annote="From the abstract: `An alternative to manual
composition of HT DBs is conversion from existing texts.
Such conversion often required careful analysis of the text
document in order to determine how best to represent its
structure. We illustrate some of the issues of conversion
with an analysis of the OED.'",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen} $\bullet$ {OED}"
}
@Article{Ra:OEDP,
Author="Darrell R. Raymond and Frank Wm. Tompa",
Title="Hypertext and the {Oxford English Dictionary}",
Journal=cacm,
Volume=31, Number=7, Month=jul, Year=1988,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/48511.48517",
Pages=871#"--"#879,
SeeAlso="Raymond \& Tompa in HT87~\cite{Ra:EarOED}",
Annote="From the abstract: `Hypertext databases can be
produced by converting existing text docs to electronic
form. The basic task in conversion is identification of
fragments. We illustrate that this is not always a
straightforward process with an analysis of the OED.'",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen} $\bullet$ {OED}"
}
@Article{Be:PotOED,
Author="Donna Lee Berg",
Title ="The Research Potential of the Electronic {OED} Database
at the {University} of {Waterloo}: A Case Study",
Journal="{Library Hi Tech}",
Volume="9:4", Number=36, Year=1991,
Pages=37#"--"#50,
CallNo="Z671.L696", ISSN="0737-8831",
Comment="To be read again",
Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ {OED}"
}
@Article{Fr:SearMB,
Title ="Searching for Information in a Hypertext Medical
Handbook",
Author="Mark E. Frisse",
Journal=cacm,
Volume=31, Number=7, Month=jul, Year=1988,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/48511.48518",
Annote="
\begin{itemize}
\item Lessons to be learned from a real system
\item Abstract:
`Medicine is an ideal domain for hypertext applications and
research. Implementing a popular medical handbook in hypertext
underscores the need to study hypertext in the context
of full-text document retrieval, machine learning, and user
interface issues'
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{MSc!Justification} $\bullet$ \K{System!DMH}",
SeeAlso="Frisse \& Cousins in HT89~\cite{Fr:MedUp}"
}
@InProceedings{Fr:MedUp,
Title="Information Retrieval from Hypertext: Update on the
Dynamic Medical Handbook Project",
Author="Mark E. Frisse and Steve B. Cousins",
BookTitle=HT89, CROSSREF="HT89",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/74224.74241",
Pages=199#"--"#212,
SeeAlso="Frisse in CACM 31(7)~\cite{Fr:SearMB}",
Comment="TO BE READ AGAIN",
Annote="
\begin{itemize}
\item HT philosophy and computer inference about useful text units
\item Abstract:
`This paper attempts to provide a perspective from which to
develop a more complete theory of IR from HT docs. Viewing
HTs as large information spaces, we compare two general
classes of navigation methods, classes we call local and
global. We argue that global methods necessitate some form
of {"}information space{"} conceptually seperate from the
HT {"}doc space{"}. We note that the architecture of both
spaces effect the ease with which once can apply various
information retrieval algorithms. We identify a number of
index space and doc space architectures and we discuss some
of the associated tradeoffs between HT functionality and
computational complexity. We show how some index space
architectures can be exploited for enhancing IR, query
refinement and automated reasoning. Through analysis of a
number of prototype systsm, we discuss current limitations
and future potential for various HT IR structures'.
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{Design} $\bullet$ \K{HT!Conversion} $\bullet$
\K{Navigation} $\bullet$ \K{System!DMH}"
}
@Article{An:SBB,
Author="Michael H. Andersen and Jakob Nielsen and Henrik
Rasmussen",
Title="A Similarity-Based Hypertext Browser for Reading the
{Unix} Network News",
Journal="Hypermedia",
Volume="1", Number="3", Year=1989,
Pages=255#"--"#265,
Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Usenet} $\bullet$ \K{HT!AutoGen}",
Annote="A toy system for evaluating the interface for a hypertext
Usenet news reader."
}
@InProceedings{Ho:FT,
Author="Sally Horton",
Title="Handling Full Text",
BookTitle=TR:SA, CROSSREF="Gillman", Year=1990,
Pages ="56--64",
SeeAlso="Agosti et al. in SIGIR'91~\cite{Ag:2LHTRM} for another
application to law resources",
Annote="Abstract: `\ldots This case study will concentrate on full
text requirements of lawyers, the methods used by the law firm of
LWD for processing full text material and the practical problems
associated with it.'",
Keyword="\K{Misc!(Other field)} $\bullet$ \K{full text}"
}
@InProceedings{Ea:WhHT,
Author="Steve M. Easterbrook",
Title="What is Hypertext?",
BookTitle=TR:SA, CROSSREF="Gillman", Year=1990,
Pages ="119--137",
Keyword="\K{HT!General} $\bullet$ \K{MSc!Justification}"
}
@InProceedings{Ac:AG,
Author= "Mark Ackerman and Thomas W. Malone",
Title="{Answer Garden}: A Tool for Growing Organizational
Memory",
BookTitle=COIS90, CROSSREF="OIS90", Year=1990,
Comment="CAN'T FIND PHOTOCOPY",
Keyword="\K{System} $\bullet$ \K{HT!AutoGen} $\bullet$
\K{HT!Guided Tour}"
}
@Article{OC:APR,
Author="John O'Connor",
Title="Answer-Passage Retrieval by Text Searching",
Journal=jasis, Month=jul, Year=1980,
Keyword="\K{Concept Identification} $\bullet$ \K{Classic}"
}
@InProceedings{Ha:LS,
Author="Yoshinori Hara and Yukata Kasahara",
Title ="A Set-to-Set Linking Strategy for Hypertext Systems",
Pages=131#"--"#135,
BookTitle=COIS90, CROSSREF="OIS90", Year=1990,
Comment="CAN'T FIND PHOTOCOPY",
Keyword="\K{Methodology}"
}
@InProceedings{Cr:RL,
Author="W. Bruce Croft and Howard Turtle",
Title= "A Retrieval Model for Incorporating Hypertext Links",
BookTitle=HT89, CROSSREF="HT89",
Pages=213#"--"#224,
Annote="Building a HT system",
Keyword="\K{Bayesian (probability)}"
}
@InProceedings{Wh:CalHT,
Author="Thoma Whalen and Andrew Patrick",
Title ="Conversational Hypertext: Information Access Through
Natural Language Dialogues with Computers",
BookTitle=SIGCHI89, CROSSREF="CHI89", Year=1989,
Pages=289#"--"#342,
Annote="Abstract: `One need not create a natural language understanding
system in order to create a hypertext dataase that can be
traversed with unconstrained natural language. The task is
simplified because the computer creates a constrained context,
imposes a non-negotiable topic and elicits simple
questions.\ldots{}'",
Keyword="\K{MSc!Justification}"
}
@Article{Fu:Spec,
Author="Richard Furuta and Catherine Plaisant and Ben
Shneiderman",
Title ="A Spectrum of Automatic Hypertext Constructions",
Journal="Hypermedia", Volume=1, Number=2, Year=1989,
Pages=179#"--"#195,
Annote="From the abstract: `We describe our experiences with
four seperate conversions from paper documents into HT and
discuss the lessons we have learned. The paper documents
organisation affects the ease with which it can be converted
and the appropriateness of the resulting HT. The form of
the paper doc's machine-readable ``mark-up'' description
affects the ability to transform the structure
automatically. Designing the link structures that tie
together the parts of the HT takes special care in
automating, as badly designed and incorrectly formed links
destroy the integrity of the hypertext. Overall, each of the
conversions followed the same basic methodology, providing
the handle for the development of ``power tools'' that can
be applied to simplify subsequent conversions.'",
Keyword="\K{Advice} $\bullet$ \K{HT!AutoGen}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Fu:reg}"
}
@Article{Tr:TextNet,
Author="Randall H. Trigg and Mark Weisner",
Title ="{TEXTNET}: A Network-Based Approach to Text Handling",
Journal="{ACM Transactions on Office Information Systems}",
Volume=4, Number=1, Month=jan, Year=1986,
Pages=1#"--"#23,
CallNo="HF 5548.125.A25",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item Abstract:
`Textnet is a new system for structuring text. The {TN} approach
approach uses 1 uniform data structure to capture graphlike pools
of text, as well as embedded hierarchical structures. By using a
semantic network formalism of nodes connected by typed links, the
relationships between neighbouring pieces of text are made
explicit. Also described is our partical implementation of the
{TN} approach, which makes use of an {OO} window/menu-driven
interface. Users peruse the network by moving among objects menus
or by reading text along a path through the network. In addition,
critiquing, reader linking, searching and jumping are easily
accessible operations. Finally, the results of a short trial with
users are presented.'
\item Designed for pools of e-text
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{System} $\bullet$ \K{link types!taxonomy of} $\bullet$
{System!TEXTNET} $\bullet$ \K{Classic}"
}
@InProceedings{Le:HP,
Author="Alain Lelu",
Title ="Automatic Generation of `Hyper-Paths' in Information
Retrieval Systems: A Stochastic and an Incremental
Algorithms{[sic]}",
BookTitle=SIGIR91, CROSSREF="IR91", Year=1991,
Pages=326#"--"#335,
Annote="Abstract: `A HT procedure for browsing through documentary
databases is proposed, based upon a global synthetic mapping in
addition to a set of local scanning axes. A method is developed for
automatic generation of these relevant axes: local component
analysis. It consists in tracking the local maxima of `partial
inertia' landscape. First a `neural' algorithm converging after
several passes on the data is presented. Then a deterministic
one-pass algorithm is deduced, allowing dynamic data-flow
analysis.'",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen!(Document Analysis)} $\bullet$
\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{correspondance analysis}",
SeeAlso="very hard to follow, see \cite{Le:HP2} instead"
}
@Article{Le:HP2,
Author="Alain Lelu",
Title="From data analysis to neural networks: new prospects for
efficent browsing through databases",
Journal="Journal of Information Science", Volume=17, Number=1,
Year=1991,
SeeAlso="\cite{Le:HP}"
}
@InProceedings{Ra:SegDBs,
Author="Lisa F. Rau and Paul S. Jacobs",
Title ="Creating Segmented Databases From Free Text for Text
Retrieval",
BookTitle=SIGIR91, CROSSREF="IR91", Year=1991,
Pages=337#"--"#355,
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item Abstract:
`$\ldots$ This paper reports on a system that uses natural language
text processing to derive keywords from free text news stories,
seperate these keywords into segments and automatically build a
segmented database. The system is used as part of a commercial
news `clipping' and retrieval product. Preliminary results show
improved accuracy, as well as reduced cost, resulting from these
automated techniques.
\item Works with newsgroups
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{Indexing} $\bullet$ \K{NLP}"
}
@Article{Ra:DWAT
,Author = "Pei-Luen Patrick Rau and Sho-Hsen Chen and Yun-Ting Chin"
,Title = "Developing Web annotation tools for learners and instructors"
,Journal = "Interacting with Computers" ,Year=2004
,volume=16 ,number=2 ,Pages = 163#"--"#181
,DOI="DOI: 10.1016/j.intcom.2003.10.001"
,URL = "http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6V0D-4BRSJTK-1/2/ddefbc9a949251b89433b53e52e0364f"
,Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW}"
}
@Article{Ha:7Iss,
Author="Frank G. Halasz",
Title="Reflections on {Notecards}: Seven Issue for the Next
Generation of Hypermedia Systems",
Journal=cacm,
Volume=31, Number=7, Month=jul, Year=1988,
Pages=836 # "--" # 852,
Annote="Abstract: `{NoteCards}, developed by a team at {Xerox} {PARC},
was designed to support the task of tranforming a chaotic collection
of unrelated thoughts into an integrated, orderly interpretation of
ideas and their interconnections. This article presents {NoteCards}
as a foil against which to explore some of the major limitations of
the current generation of hypermedia systems, and characterizes the
issues that must be addresed in designing the next generation
systems.'",
Comment="Advice",
Keyword="\K{Design} $\bullet$ \K{Classic} $\bullet$
\K{System!NoteCards}"
}
@Article{L:RTool,
Author="Michael L. Begeman and Jeff Conkln",
Title ="The Right Tool for the Job",
Journal="Byte",
Pages="255, 256, 258, 260--262, 264, 266, 268",
Month=oct, Year=1988,
Annote="Systems design process for HT, describes IBIS and gIBIS",
Keyword="\K{Design} $\bullet$ \K{System!IBIS} $\bullet$
\K{System!gIBIS}"
}
@InProceedings{Br:Assess,
Author="P.~J. Brown",
Title="Assesing the quality of hypertext documents",
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA",
Pages=1#"--"#12,
Annote="Section about assessment",
Keyword="\K{Authoring} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$"
}
@InProceedings{Ho:CONCORDE,
Author="Martin Hoffman and Uwe Schreiweis and Horst
Langend{\"o}rfer",
Title="An Integrated Approach of Knowledge Acquisition by the
Hypertext System {CONCORDE}",
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA",
Pages=166#"--"#179,
Annote="Application of HT to task",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen!(AI)} $\bullet$ \K{System!CONCORDE} $\bullet$
\K{AI!AutoGen}"
}
@InProceedings{DeY:LH,
Author="Laura De Young",
Title="Linking Considered Harmful",
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA",
Year=1990,
Pages=238#"--"#249,
Annote="Abstract: `Arbitrary linking of data in HT allows for great
flexibility, but the result is often HT in which users readily become
disoriented. Where possible, it is desirable to provide support for
structuring HT in a way that makes it easier to organize and
understand. This can be done by identifying the underlying structure
of the ways specific sets of data are related. Providing support for
use of such structures in a HT system may yield benefits similar to
those found in using higher-level programming constructs in
programs.'",
Keyword="\K{Design} $\bullet$ \K{HT!General} $\bullet$ \K{Info Shape}"
}
@InProceedings{Fo:MuCOSM,
Title="{MICROCOSM}: An Open Model for Hypermedia With Dynamic
Linking",
Author="Andrew M. Fountain and Wendy Hall and Ian Heath and
Hugh C. Davis",
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA", Year=1990,
Pages=298#"--"#311,
Keyword="\K{Design} $\bullet$ \K{System!Microcosm}"
}
@InProceedings{Ba:BSys,
Author="Patricia Baird and Jacqueline Covo and Ben
Schneiderman and Ian Williams and Renee Deter",
Title="The advantages of hypertext for large information
systems; where are the big systems?",
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA", Year=1990,
Note="{Summary of panel discussion}",
Pages=343#"--"#346,
Keyword="\K{HT!General}"
}
@Article{Jo:QR,
Author="Mark Johnston",
Title="Sidebar: Qualitative Reasoning",
Journal="{Library Hi Tech}",
Volume="10:1--2", Number="37--38", Year=1992,
Pages=96#"--"#97,
CallNo="Z671.L696", ISSN="0737-8831",
Note="CYC project --- sidebar to \cite{Ri:AnUnS}",
Keyword="\K{AI!(reasoning system)} $\bullet$ \K{System!CYC}"
}
@Article{Ri:AnUnS,
Author="Lyn Richards and Tom Richards",
Title= "Analyzing Unstructured Information: Can Computers Help?",
Journal="{Library Hi Tech}",
Volume="10:1--2", Number="37--38", Year=1992,
Pages="95, 98--109",
CallNo="Z671.L696", ISSN="0737-8831",
Comment="{NUDIST} (AI) system",
Keyword="\K{Categorization!system} $\bullet$ \K{System!NUDIST}"
}
@Article{Co:NLP,
Author="Dan Corbett",
Title="Sidebar: Natural Language Processing",
Journal="{Library Hi Tech}",
Volume="10:1--2", Number="37--38", Year=1992,
Pages="112",
CallNo="Z671.L696", ISSN="0737-8831",
Note="Sidebar to \cite{Jo:CAn}",
Keyword="\K{Misc!(AI)}"
}
@Article{Jo:CAn,
Author="Richard L. Jones",
Title ="Automatic Document Content Analysis: The {AIDA} Project",
Journal="{Library Hi Tech}",
Volume="10:1--2", Number="37--38", Year=1992,
Pages="111, 113--117",
CallNo="Z671.L696", ISSN="0737-8831",
SeeAlso="\cite{Ha:Ess}",
Annote="From the abstract: [The {AIDA} project's] primary
objective is to develop practical methods for carrying out document
content analysis with minimal human intervention. Following a very
successful independant assessment of the techniques, the first
commercial-strength tool has now been developed. It links the
different {AIDA} analyses (point form summary, keywords and so on)
with the original document to form a `complete' hyperdoc. The
techniques employed are described.",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen} $\bullet$ \K{System!AIDA}"
}
@Article{Ba:BsOnl,
Author="Reva Basch",
Title="Books Online: Visions, Plans, and Perspectives for
Electronic Text",
Journal="Online",
Month=jul, Year=1991,
CallNo="Z699.A1O545", ISSN="0146-5422",
Keyword="\K{MSc!Justification} $\bullet$ \K{HT!General}"
}
@InProceedings{Ag:2LHTRM,
Author="Maristella Agosti and Roberto Colotti and Girolamo
Gradenigo",
Title="A Two-Level Hypertext Retrieval Model for Legal
Data",
BookTitle="{SIGIR} '91 Proceedings of the 14th Annual International
{ACM/SIGIR} Conference on Research and Development in Information
Retrieval",
Editor="A.~Bookstein and Y.~Chiaramella and G.~Salton and
V.~V. Raghava",
Publisher="The Association for Computing Machinery",
Organization="{ACM SIGIR}",
Address="Chicago, Illinois, USA",
Month="13--16 " # oct, Year=1991,
HowPublished="SIGIR Forum",
Pages=316#"--"#325,
SeeAlso="Horton in TR:SA~\cite{Ho:FT} for another application to law
resources",
Annote="
\begin{itemize}
\item
A query system over a limited domain
\item
A prototype document management system, called HyperLaw, for
testing the EXPLICIT model with a highly structured law code.
EXPLICIT is a two-level indexing scheme. The two levels are
documents and descriptions of the document contents.
\item Abstract:
`The paper introduces an associative IR model based on the
2-level architecture proposed in [Agosti et al, 1989a] and
[Agosti et al, 1990], and an experimental prototype developed in
order to validate the model in a personal computing environment.
In the 1st part of the paper, related work and motivations are
presented. In the 2nd part, the model, entitled {EXPLICIT}, is
introduced. {EXPLICIT} is based on a 2-level architecture which
holds the 2 main parts of the info resource managed by an {IR}
tool: the collection of documents and the indexing term
structure. The term structure is managed as a schema of concepts
which can be used by the final user as a frame of reference in
the query formulation process. The model supports the concurrent
use of different schemas of concepts to satisfy info needs of
different categories of users. In the 3rd part of the paper, the
main characteristics of the experimental prototype, named
{HyperLaw}, are presented.'
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen} $\bullet$ \K{System!HyperLaw} $\bullet$
\K{System!EXPLICIT} $\bullet$ \K{System!HYPERLINE} $\bullet$
\K{link types!taxonomy of}",
}
@Article{Fr:T2HT,
Author="Mark Frisse",
Title="From Text to Hypertext",
Journal="Byte",
Month=oct, Year=1988,
Pages="247--251, 253",
Annote="Introduction to auto generation",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen}"
}
@Article{We:Hums,
Author="Erwin K. Welsch",
Title="Hypertext, Hypermedia, and the Humanities",
Journal="{Library Trends}",
Volume=40, Number=4, Month="Spring", Year=1992,
Pages=614#"--"#646,
Annote="Abstract: `{HT/HM} systems in the humanities have evolved
signifigantly in the last decade and particularly since 1985. The
writings of humanist scholars are important in understanding the use
of theis comparitivly new medium for information access and use.
{HT/HM} applications in the humanities show signifigant promise for
the future but may also present libraries with special problems.
This article provides historical background on {HT/HM}; focuses on
their use in the humanities; describes humanities projects that
illustrate trends and techniques; discusses libraries roles in
{HT/HM} humanities computing; and concludes with a description of
challenges and opportunites as librarians implement such systems.'",
Comment="NOT YET READ",
Keyword="\K{HT!General!(Background)} $\bullet$ \K{Definition}"
}
@InProceedings{Le:TCat,
Author="David D. Lewis",
Title="An Evaluation of Phrasal and Clustered Representations
on a Text Categorization Task",
BookTitle="{SIGIR} '92 Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual
International {ACM SIGIR} Conference on Research and Development
in Information Retrieval",
Editor="Nicholas Belkin and Peter Ingwersen and Annelise Mark
Pejtersen",
Publisher="{ACM}",
Organization="{Royal School of Librarianship, Copenhagen,
Denmark}",
Address="Copenhagen, Denmark",
Month="21--24 " # jun, Year=1992,
HowPublished="{SIGIR Forum} (2 July 1992)",
Pages=37#"--"#50,
Annote="Abstract: `Syntactic phrase indexing and term clustering have
been widely explored as text representation techniques for text
retrieval. In this paper we study the properties of phrasal and
clustered indexing languages on a text categorization task, enabling
us to study their properties in isolation from query interpretation
issues. \ldots{}'",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen!(IR/NLP)}"
}
@InProceedings{Le:LeCr,
Author="David D. Lewis and W. Bruce Croft",
Title="Term Clustering of Syntactic Phrases",
BookTitle=SIGIR91, CROSSREF="IR91", Year=1991,
Pages=385#"--"#404,
Annote="Syntactic phrase generator",
Keyword="\K{Cluster} $\bullet$ \K{phrase}"
}
@InProceedings{Cr:Thes,
Author="Carolyn J. Crouch and Bokyung Yang",
Title="Experiments in Automatic Statistical Thesaurus
Construction",
BookTitle=SIGIR92, CROSSREF="IR92", Year=1992,
Pages=77#"--"#88,
Comment="NOT YET READ",
Keyword="\K{System!CODER}",
Annote="Evaluation of a statistical method (Crouch's) to
construct thesauri from several documents. Present their own
method."
}
@InProceedings{Fu:SVDnLSI,
Author="George W. Furnas and Scott Deerwester and Susan T.
Dumais and Thomas K. Landauer and Richard A. Harshman and
Lynn A. Streeter and Laren E. Lochbaum",
Title="Information Retrieval using a Singular Value
Decomposition Model of Latent Semantic Structure",
BookTitle="SIGIR '88", Year=1988,
Address="Grenoble, France",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/62437.62487",
Keyword="\K{LSI}",
SeeAlso="faster LSI?~\cite{Ko:SDMDLSI}"
}
@Article{Ko:SDMDLSI,
Title="A semidiscrete matrix decomposition for latent semantic indexing
information retrieval",
Author="Tamara G. Kolda and Dianne P. O'Leary",
Journal=tois, Volume=16, Number=4, Month=oct, year=1998,
Pages=322 # "--" # 346,
Keyword="\K{LSI}",
Annote="Abstract:`The vast amount of textual information available
today is useless unless it can be effectively and efficiently
searched. The goal in information retrieval is to find documents that
are relevant to a given user query. We can represent and document
collection by a matrix whose $(i,j)$ entry is nonzero only if the
$i$th term appears in the $j$th document; thus each document
corresponds to a columm vector. The query is also represented as a
column vector whose $i$th term is nonzero only if the $i$th term
appears in the query. We score each document for relevancy by taking
its inner product with the query. The highest-scoring documents are
considered the most relevant. Unfortunately, this method does not
necessarily retrieve all relevant documents because it is based on
literal term matching. Latent semantic indexing (LSI) replaces the
document matrix with an approximation generated by the truncated
singular-value decomposition (SVD). This method has been shown to
overcome many difficulties associated with literal term matching. In
this article we propose replacing the SVD with the semidiscrete
decomposition (SDD). We will describe the SDD approximation, show how
to compute it, and compare the SDD-based LSI method to the SVD-based
LSI methods. We will show that SDD-based LSI does as well as SVD-based
LSI in terms of document retrieval while requiring only one-twentieth
the storage and one-half the time to compute each query. We will also
show how to update the SDD approximation when documents are added or
deleted from the document collection.'"
}
@InProceedings{St:LSIExpt,
Title="An Expert/Expert-Locating System Based on Automatic
Representation of Semantic Structure",
Author="Lynn A. Streeter and Karen E. Lochbaum",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Artificial
Intelligence Applications",
Address="San Diego, CA", Month="14--18" # mar, Year=1988
}
@InProceedings{Du:ULSA,
Author="Susan T. Dumais and George W. Furnas and Thomas K.
Landauer",
Title ="Using Latent Semantic Analysis to Improve Access to
Textual Information",
BookTitle=SIGCHI88, CROSSREF="CHI88", Year=1988,
Keyword="\K{LSI}"
}
@InProceedings{De:IRnLSA,
Title="Improving Information Retrieval with Latent Semantic
Indexing",
Author="Scott Deerwester and Susan Dumais and Thomas Landauer
and George Furna and Laura Beck",
BookTitle="Information \& Technology Planning for the Second 50
Years Proceedings of the 51st Annual Meeting of the American
Society for Information Science",
Editor="Christine L. Borgman and Edward Y.~H. Pai",
Publisher="Learned Information, Inc.",
Address="Atlanta, Georgia", Month="23--27 " # oct,
Year=1988, Volume=25,
Pages=36#"--"#40,
Keyword="\K{LSI}"
}
@Article{De:IBLSA,
Author="Scott Deerwester and Susan T. Dumais and George W.
Furnas and Thomas K. Landauer and Richard Harshman",
Title="Indexing by Latent Semantic Analysis",
Journal=jasis, Volume=41, Number=6, Month=sep, Year=1990,
Pages=391#"--"#407,
Keyword="\K{LSI}"
}
@InProceedings{Fo:SemInd,
Author ="Peter W. Foltz",
Title="Using Latent Semantic Indexing for Information Filtering",
Pages=40#"--"#47,
BookTitle=COIS90, CROSSREF="OIS90", Year=1990,
Annote="work with Usenet suggested designed for pools of e-text",
Keyword="\K{LSI} $\bullet$ \K{Information Filtering}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Co:HTIntro}"
}
@InProceedings{Ba:LSIis,
Author="Brian T. Bartell and Garrison W. Cottrell and Richard
K. Belew",
Title ="Latent Sematic Indexing is an Optimal Special Case of
Multidimensional Scaling",
BookTitle=SIGIR92, CROSSREF="IR92", Year=1992,
Comment="I have the abstract only",
Keyword="\K{LSI} $\bullet$ \K{Statistics!MDS}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Ca:MDS}"
}
@Article{vD:KN87,
Author="Van Dam, Andries",
Title ="Hypertext '87 Keynote Address",
Journal=cacm,
Month=jul, Year=1988, Volume=31, Number=7,
Pages=887#"--"#894
}
@InProceedings{Jo:LD,
Author="Jones, {III}, Henry W.",
Title ="Developing and Distributing Hypertext Tools: Legal
Inputs and Paramaters",
BookTitle=HT87, CROSSREF="HT87",
Pages=367#"--"#374,
Keyword="\K{Legal Issues}"
}
@InProceedings{Fi:JANUS,
Author="Gerhard Fischer and Raymond McCall and Anders Morch",
Title ="{JANUS}: Integrating Hypertext with a Knowledge-based
Design Environment",
BookTitle=HT89, CROSSREF="HT89",
Pages=105#"--"#117,
Keyword="\K{System!JANUS}"
}
@InProceedings{Po:IntInt,
Title ="Intelligent Interfaces to Text Retrieval Systems",
Author="AS~Pollitt",
BookTitle=TR:SA, CROSSREF="Gillman", Year=1990,
Pages=192#"--"#208
}
@InProceedings{Bo:TR,
Title ="Text Representations",
Author="Kathryn Boar",
BookTitle=TR:SA, CROSSREF="Gillman", Year=1990,
Pages=97#"--"#100,
Keyword="\K{SGML}"
}
@InProceedings{Ki:MI,
Title ="Integrating Text Into Management Information",
Author="Catherine Kimmel",
BookTitle=TR:SA, CROSSREF="Gillman", Year=1990,
Pages=101#"--"#111
}
@InProceedings{Cl:TRHype,
Title ="Text Retrieval: Technology and Marketplace, Reality
and Hype",
Author="Robin Clough",
BookTitle=TR:SA, CROSSREF="Gillman", Year=1990,
Pages=93#"--"#96
}
@InProceedings{Ra:LI,
Title ="Your Rights to Your Data: Legal Issues You Need to Consider",
Author="Diane Raper",
BookTitle=TR:SA, CROSSREF="Gillman", Year=1990,
Pages=37#"--"#41,
Keyword="\K{Legal Issues}"
}
@InProceedings{Du:CompAr,
Title ="Composite Document Architecture: Increased Scope for
Text Retrieval Systems",
Author="CPR Dubois",
BookTitle=TR:SA, CROSSREF="Gillman", Year=1990,
Comment="I have only the abstract"
}
@InProceedings{Ak:DMIsH,
Author="Robert Akscyn and Elise Yoder and Donald McCracken",
Title ="The Data Model Is the Heart of Interface Design",
Pages=115#"--"#120,
BookTitle="Human factors in computing systems {CHI '88} conference
Proceedings",
Editor="Elliot Soloway and Douglas Frye and Sylvia B. Sheppard",
Month="15--19 " # may, Year=1988,
Organization="{ACM SIGCHI}", Publisher="{Addison-Wesley}",
}
@InProceedings{Pi:Aff,
Title="{SaTellite}: Hypermedia Navigation by Affinity",
Author="Xavier Pintado and Dennis Tsichritzis",
Pages=274#"--"#287,
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA", Year=1990,
Keyword="\K{System!SaTellite}"
}
@InProceedings{St:Trans,
Author="P.~David Stotts and Richard Furuta",
Title="Hierarchy, Composition, Scripting Languages, and
Translators for Structured Hypertext",
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA", Year=1990,
Comment="I have only the abstract"
}
@InProceedings{Wi:LawHT,
Title="Links and Structures in Hypertext Databases for Law",
Author="Eve Wilson",
Pages=194#"--"#211,
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA", Year=1990,
SeeAlso="Agostini et al.'s Two-level~\cite{Ag:2LHTRM}"
}
@InProceedings{Bi:NNs,
Title="Browsing in Hyperdocuments with the Assistance of a
Neural Network",
Author="Fr\'ed\'erique Biennier and Michel Guivarch and
Jean-Marie Pinon",
Pages=288#"--"#297,
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA", Year=1990,
Keyword="\K{Neural net}",
Annote="navigation \& query refinement not how to index (assumed
relationship ratings, too)",
}
@InProceedings{Sh:AndrewO,
Title="Building Hypertext on a Multimedia Toolkit: An
Overview of {Andrew Toolkit Hypermedia Facilities}",
Author="Mark Sherman and Wilfred J. Hansen and Michael
McInerny and Tom Neuendorffer",
Pages=13#"--"#24,
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA", Year=1990,
Keyword="\K{System!Andrew}"
}
@InProceedings{Br:HIndices,
Title="Hyperindices: A Novel Aid for Searching in Hypermedia",
Author="Peter D. Bruza",
Pages=109#"--"#122,
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA", Year=1990
}
@InProceedings{Af:HTQM,
Title="A Hypertext Model Supporting Querying Mechanisms",
Author="Foto Afrati and Constantinos D. Koutras",
Pages=52#"--"#66,
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA", Year=1990
}
@InProceedings{Pu:HTTk,
Title="The Toolkit Approach to Hypermedia",
Author="J.~J. Puttress and N.~M. Guimaraes",
Pages=25#"--"#37,
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA", Year=1990,
SeeAlso="\cite{Sh:AndrewO}"
}
@InProceedings{Sc:NEng,
Title="Intelligent Hypertext for Normative Knowledge in
Engineering",
Author="Daniel Schwabe and Bruno Feijo and Werther G. Krause",
Pages=123#"--"#136,
BookTitle=ECHT90, CROSSREF="HT:CSnA", Year=1990
}
@InProceedings{Cl:FSs,
Title="File Structures for Text Retrieval",
Author="David Clayworth",
Pages ="147--158",
BookTitle=TR:SA, CROSSREF="Gillman", Year=1990
}
@InProceedings{Jo:LHTS,
Title="Case Study: Hypertext-based Integrated Laboratory
Information System",
Author="Richard Jones",
Pages ="138--146",
BookTitle=TR:SA, CROSSREF="Gillman", Year=1990
}
@InProceedings{Be:Plm,
Author="William O. Beeman and Kenneth T. Anderson and Gail
Bader and James Larkin and Anne P. McClard and Patrick
McQuillan and Mark Shields",
Title="Hypertext and Pluralism: From Lineal to Non-Lineal
Thinking",
BookTitle=HT87, CROSSREF="HT87",
Pages=67#"--"#88,
Annote="Hypertext as a tool for education"
}
@InProceedings{Re:SB,
Author="Joel R. Remde and Louis M. Gomez and Thomas K. Landauer",
Title="SuperBook: An Automatic Tool for Information Exploration ---
Hypertext?",
Pages=175#"--"#188,
BookTitle=HT87, CROSSREF="HT87",
Annote="Not really HT \& requires marked-up text",
SeeAlso="TOIS 7(1):30--57~\cite{Eg:EvalSB}",
Keyword="\K{System!SuperBook}"
}
@Article{Eg:EvalSB,
Author="Dennis E. Egan and Joel R. Remde and Louis M. Gomez
and Thomas K. Landauer and Jennifer Eberhardt and Carol
C. Lochbaum",
Title="Formative Design-Evaluation of {SuperBook}",
Journal=tois,
Volume=7, Number=1, Month=jan, Year=1989, Pages=30 # "--" # 57,
Annote="not really HT, conflicting accounts of an experiment,
mostly about user interfaces evaluation, read for GSLIS 861",
SeeAlso="HT '87~\cite{Re:SB} and Chapter in HT:A $\psi$
Persp.~\cite{La:En}",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{System!SuperBook}"
}
@InCollection{La:En,
Author="Thomas Landauer and Dennis Egan and Joel Remde and Michael
Lesk and Carol Lochbaum and Daniel Ketchum",
Title="Enhancing the Usability of Text Through Computer Delivery and
Formative Evaluation: The {SuperBook} Project",
Chapter=5,
BookTitle=HTPsyP, CROSSREF="HT+Psych",
Annote="Much more about background of the design of SuperBook and
issues that need to be addressed in developing such a system than
about the experiments. See the TOIS paper for the experimental
details and flaws. There may be some additional detail here but it
only makes sense after the TOIS description.",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Compare with Nielsen's chapter~\cite{Ni:HTUsab95} for HT
background.
\item See these author's TOIS paper~\cite{Eg:EvalSB} for more
details about their experiment
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{System!SuperBook}"
}
@InProceedings{In:Holmes,
Author="Keith Instone and Barbee Mynatt Teasley and Laura Marie
Leventhal",
Title="Empirically-based Re-design of a Hypertext Encyclopedia [sic]",
Pages=500#"--"#506,
BookTitle="Proceedings of {INTERCHI} 1993",
Editor="Stacey Ashlund and Kevin Mullet and Austin Henderson and
Erik Hollnagel and Ted White",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley", Month="24~-- 29 " # apr, Year=1993,
SeeAlso="SuperBook~\cite{Re:SB}",
Keyword="\K{System!SuperBook}"
}
@InProceedings{My:HTorBook,
Author="Barbee T. Mynatt and Laura Marie Leventhal and Keith
Instone and John Farhat and Diane S. Rohlman",
Title="Hypertext or Book: Which is Better for Answering
Questions?",
Pages=19#"--"#25,
BookTitle="CHI '92, conference proceedings, ACM Conference on
Human Factors in Computing Systems, striking a balance",
Editor="Penny Bauersfeld and John Bennett and Gene Lynch",
Month="3--7 " # may, Year=1992,
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item SuperBook~\cite{Re:SB},
\item Lehto et al.'s The Relative Effectiveness of Hypertext and
Text~\cite{Le:REHT}, and
\item Chen \& Rada's Meta-Analysis~\cite{Ch:Meta}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{System!SuperBook}"
}
@InProceedings{DeLu:EM99,
Author="Diana Dee-Lucas",
Title="Information Location in Instructional Hypertext: Effects of
Content Domain Expertise",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the {ED-MEDIA 99} --- World Conference on
Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia",
Editor="B. Collis and R. Oliver",
Year=1999, Pages=242 # "--" # 247,
Address="Charlottesville, {VA}",
Organization="Association for the Advancement of Computing in
Education",
SeeAlso="SuperBook~\cite{Eg:EvalSB} for a contrasting experiment
(compare the overlapping vs. non-overlapping)",
Keyword="\K{System!SuperBook} $\bullet$ \K{Expertise} $\bullet$
\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Article{DeLu:HTSGC,
Author="Diana Dee-Lucas and Jill Huston Larkin",
Title="Hypertext Segmentation and Goal Compatibility: Effects on Study
Strategies and Learning",
Journal=JEHM, Volume=8, Number=3, Year=1999,
Annote="\begin{description}
\item[Abstract] `Hypertext allows students to select information for
study according to their individual needs. This flexibility
potentially increases study efficiency, but may consequently decrease
breadth of learning. The current research examined this trade-off for
hypertext segmented either into many small units (more segmented) or
fewer larger units (less segmented). It compared study strategies and
text recall with a more- and less-segmented hypertext when (a)~the
more specific units of the more-segmented hypertext facilitated
information location for the study goal, and (b)~the location of
goal-related information was equally apparent with both
hypertexts. Readers with a more-segmented hypertext focused on
goal-related content, resulting in detailed memory for goal units but
narrower overall recall. Readers with a less-segmented hypertext
explored unrelated units, and recalled a broader range of
content. However, when the larger size of these less-segmented units
made information location more difficult, fewer readers completed the
goal. This research suggests that different content segmentations may
be appropriate for different types of goals with hypertext. When the
text segmentation is incompatible with the study goal, effective use
of hypertext may depend on learner characteristics influencing study
persistence (e.g., prior knowledge, motivation, study skills, etc.).'
\item[notes] `different content segmentations may be appropriate for
different types of goals.' `When segmentation is incompatible with
study goal then indiv. diffs. may be deciding factors'
\end{description}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Domain Knowledge, Interest, and Hypertext Navigation: A Study
of Individual Differences by Lawless et al.~\cite{La:DKIHN}
\item Dillon \& Gabbards's survey~\cite{Di:EdHTRev}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{individual differences}"
}
@Article{Di:JaD,
Author="Andrew Dilon and Misah Vaughan",
Title="``It's the journey and the destination'': Shape and the emergent
property of genre in evaluating digital documents",
Journal=NRHM, Volume=3, Pages=91#"--"#106, Year=1997,
Note="CITATION DETAILS NOT CONFIRMED --- OBTAINED FROM WWW",
Keyword="\K{Info Shape} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation} $\bullet$ \K{Review}"
}
@Article{DL:LET,
Author="Diana Dee-Lucas and Jill Larkin",
Title="Learning from Electronic Texts: Effects of Interactive Overview
for Information Access",
Journal="Cognition and Instruction", Volume=13, Number=3, Year=1995,
Pages=431 # "--" # 468,
Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{individual differences}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item navigation as different uses of text~\cite{Sp:FNav}
\item individual differences and navigation~\cite{La:DKIHN}
\item Robinson et al.'s Evidence of spatial encoding of study
materials~\cite{Ro:WWRMLP}
\end{itemize}",
Annote="Not in Dillon \& Gabbards's survey~\cite{Di:EdHTRev}"
}
@InProceedings{DL:IHT,
Author="Diana Dee-Lucas",
Title="Instructional Hypertext: Study Strategies for Different Types of
Learning Tasks",
BookTitle="{ED-MEDIA 96}", Year=1996, Month="17--22" # jun,
Organization="Association for the Advancement of Computing in
Education",
Address="Boston, {MA}, {USA}",
Annote="(1)~not in Dillon \& Gabbards's survey~\cite{Di:EdHTRev},
(2)~`The findings indicate that readers are flexible in developing
goal-specific strategies for studying hypertext, and that different
text features support different types of hypertext processing'",
Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@InCollection{Sa:ATAna,
Author="Gerard Salton",
Title="Automatic Text Analysis",
BookTitle="Key Papers in Information Science", Pages=284#"--"#292,
Editor="Belver C. Griffith",
Publisher="Knowledge Industry Publications, Inc.", Year=1980,
Note="Reprinted from {\em Science} volume 168, pp.335--43, 17
April 1970"
}
@InProceedings{Sa:EncI,
Author="Gerard Salton and Chris Buckley",
Title="Automatic Text Structuring and Retrieval ---
Experiments in Automatic Encyclopedia Searching",
BookTitle=SIGIR91, CROSSREF="IR91", Year=1991,
Pages=21#"--"#30,
SeeAlso="\cite{Sa:AuStLHT}"
}
@Article{To:FlexDM,
Author="Frank Wm. Tompa",
Title ="A Data Model for Flexible Hypertext Database
Systems",
Journal=tois,
Volume=7, Number=1, Month=jan, Year=1989,
Pages=85#"--"#100,
Comment="I have only the abstract"
}
@Article{Wa:TrGMod,
Author="Carolyn Watters and Michael A. Shepherd",
Title ="A Transient Hypergraph-Based Model for Data Access",
Journal=tois,
Volume=8, Number=2, Month=apr, Year=1990,
Pages=77#"--"#102,
Comment="I have the abstract only",
Keyword="\K{Browsing} $\bullet$ \K{HT!AutoGen}"
}
@Article{Ni:NavHT,
Author="Jakob Nielsen",
Title="The Art of Navigating Through Hypertext",
Journal=cacm,
Volume=33, Number=3, Month=mar, Year=1990,
Pages=296#"--"#310,
Annote="`A description of the design of a hypertext system using
the indvidual user's personal interaction history to provide a
greater sense of context in the navigation space and a discussion of
human factors problems found in usability testing of earlier
versions of the system. The article is illustrated with a large
number of screen dumps forming a guided tour of the system.' ---
Nielsen~\cite[p.\,234]{Nielsen}",
Keyword="\K{Navigation}"
}
@Article{Be:Comp,
Title="The Bookmark and the Compass: Orientation tools for
hypertext users",
Author="Mark Bernstein",
Journal=sigois,
Volume=9, Number=4, Month=oct, Year=1988,
Pages=34#"--"#45,
Annote="`Rationale for the design of the Hypergate user interface,
including `breadcrumbs' marking the user's footprints, user-defined
bookmarksn and author-defined thumb tabs (permanently visible links
to landmark nodes). The author advocates use of hand-drawn overview
maps instead of automatically generated maps.' --- Nielsen\cite[pp.
211~--~2]{Ni:Bib90}"
}
@Article{Br:LnS,
Title="Linking and Searching within hypertext",
Author="P.~J. Brown",
Journal="Electronic Publishing --- Origination, Dissemination
and Design",
Volume=1, Number=1, Month=apr, Year=1988,
Pages="45-53",
Annote="A discussion of how a `find' command (viewed as an
unstructured linking mechanism) can be integrated into
a hypertext system. --- Nielsen\cite[p.211]{Ni:Bib90}"
}
@InProceedings{Fu:FE,
Author="G.~W. Furnas",
Title="Generalized Fisheye Views",
BookTitle=SIGCHI86, CROSSREF="CHI86", Year=1986,
Pages=16#"--"#23,
Annote="Fisheye views present close objects in detail and far
objects as smaller and less detailed. Furnas conjectures that such
views should be useful for examining unfamiliar parts of a large
file. He presents a method with nodes stored in a tree and uses the
shortest path between nodes as adistance function. Nielsen says:
`Fisheye views show the context immediately surrounding the
information of interest in greater detail while information farther
away is elided{\ldots}.' --- Nielsen\cite[p.222 --~3]{Ni:Bib90}",
Keyword="\K{Classic} $\bullet$ \K{Fisheye view}",
SeeAlso="Enhanced views~\cite{To:EnFE} and Effective View
Navigation~\cite{Fu:EVN} and especially the TCHI 1994
review~\cite{Le:RTDOP}"
}
@InProceedings{To:EnFE,
Author="K.~Tochtermann and G.~Dittrich",
Title="Fishing for Clarity in Hyperdocuments with Enhanced
Fisheye-Views",
BookTitle=ECHT92, CROSSREF="ECHT-92",
Pages=212#"--"#221,
SeeAlso="Generalized Fisheye Views by Furnas~\cite{Fu:FE} and
Schaffer et al. (TCHI 1996) for some validity
testing~\cite{Sc:NHCNFE}",
Keyword="\K{Fisheye view}"
}
@InProceedings{Fu:EVN,
Author="George W. Furnas",
Title="Effective View Navigation",
BookTitle=SIGCHI97, CROSSREF="CHI97", Year=1997,
SeeAlso="Generalized Fisheye Views also by Furnas~\cite{Fu:FE}",
Keyword="\K{Fisheye view}"
}
@Article{Sc:NHCNFE,
Title="Navigating hierarchically clustered networks through fisheye
and full-zoom methods",
Author="Doug Schaffer and Zhengping Zuo and Saul Greenberg and Lyn
Bartram and John Dill and Shelli Dubs and Mark Roseman",
Journal=TOCHI, Volume=3, Number=2, Month=jun, Year=1996,
Pages=162 # "--" # 188,
Keyword="\K{Fisheye view}",
SeeAlso="TCHI 1994 Review \cite{Le:RTDOP}",
Annote="Abstract:`Many information structures are represented as
two-dimensional networks (connected graphs) of links and
nodes. Because these network tend to be large and quite complex,
people often perfer to view part or all of the network at varying
levels of detail. Hierarchical clustering provides a framework for
viewing the network at different levels of detail by superimposing a
hierarchy on it. Nodes are grouped into clusters, and clusters are
themselves place into other clusters. Users can then navigate these
clusters until an appropiate level of detail is reached. This article
describes an experiment comparing two methods for viewing
hierarchically clustered networks. Traditional full-zoom techniques
provide details of only the current level of the hierarchy.
\\\indent
In contrast, fisheye views, generated by the ``variable-zoom''
algorithm described in this article, provide information about higher
levels as well. Subjects using both viewing methods were given
problem-solving tasks requiring them to navigate a network, in this
case, a simulated telephone system, and to reroute links in
it. Results suggest that the greater context provided by fisheye views
significantly improved user performance. Users were quicker to
complete their task and made fewer unnecessary navigational steps
through the hierarchy. This validation of fisheye views in important
for designers of interfaces to complicated monitoring systems, such as
control rooms for supervisory control and data acquistion systems,
where efficient human performance is often critical. However, control
room operators remained concerned about the size and visibility
tradeoffs between the fine room operators remained concerned about the
size and visibility tradeoffs between the fine detail provided by
full-zoom techniques and the global context supplied by fisheye
views. Specific interface feaures are required to reconcile the
differences.'"
}
@InCollection{Ha:HTtips,
Author="L.~Hardman",
Title="Hypertext Tips: Experiences in Developing a Hypertext
Tutorial",
Editor="D.~M. Jones and R.~Winder",
BookTitle="People and Computers {IV}",
Publisher="Cambridge University Press", Year=1988,
Pages=437#"--"#451,
Annote="`Experience from the development of a tutorial on the
structure of the brain for physiology students and some general
comments on hypertext style. As a practical comment, the reader
should note that the pictures shown in Figures 1 and 2 in the paper
have accidentally been swapped' ---
Nielsen~\cite[p.224]{Ni:Bib90}",
Keyword="\K{Author}"
}
@Article{Hu:GenCon,
Author="L.~J. Hubert",
Title="Generalized Concordance",
Journal="Psychometrika", Volume=44,Year=1979,
Pages=135#"--"#142,
Keyword="\K{HT!Conversion}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Le:ConDist,Hu:Prox}",
Annote="`Methods that can be used to measure the proximity of two
hierarchical structures and that can be applied to the problem of
measuring how far the structure of the user's conceptual model is
from a hypertext's structure....' ---
Nielsen\cite[p.227]{Ni:Bib90}"
}
@Article{Ka:Kahn,
Author="P. Kahn",
Title="Linking Together Books: Experiments in Adapting
Published Material Into Hypertext",
Journal="Hypermedia", Volume=1, Number=2, Year=1989,
Pages=111#"--"#145,
Annote="`Describes the conversion of a set of books on Chinese
poetry into Intermedia format, giving plenty of screen shots. One
interesting illustration is an overview diagram of the translators
[sic] of the poet Tu Fu, which are ordered in two dimensions:
Chronologically [sic] on the on the [sic] y-axis and according to
the tranlator's emphasis on sinology or poetry on the x-axis. The
author distinguises between {\em objective links} (those present in
the text being converted such as explicit literature references) and
{\em subjective links} (those being added because the converter or
other hypertext user sees a connection between two items.' ---
Nielsen\cite[p.227]{Ni:Bib90}",
Keyword="\K{System!Intermedia} $\bullet$ \K{HT!Conversion}"
}
@InProceedings{Eg:CORE,
Title="Hypertext For The Electronic Library? {CORE} Sample Results",
Author="Dennis E. Egan and Michael E. Lesk and R. Daniel
Ketchum and Carol C. Lochbaum and Joel R. Remde and
Michael Littman and Thomas K. Landauer",
BookTitle=HT91, CROSSREF="HT91",
Pages=299#"--"#312,
Keyword="\K{System!CORE}"
}
@Article{Fa:Forest,
Title="Adding Hypertext Links To an Archive of Documents",
Author="Eanass Fahmy and David T. Barnard",
Journal="The Canadian Journal of Information Science",
Volume=15, Number=3, Month=sep, Year=1990,
Pages=25#"--"#41,
ISSN="0380-9218", CODEN="CJISDE",
From="Elborne College/SLIS",
Organization="the Canadian Association for Information Science",
Annote="Takes structured text marked up in SGML as input and
makes links. Uses 4 kinds of links: structural, index,
cross-reference and user-supplied. Built on Fahmy's MSc
Thesis.",
Keyword="\K{System!MAESTRO} $\bullet$ \K{SGML}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Fa:ForestLinks}"
}
@Article{Ko:NLPnAuto1,
Title="Natural-language processing and automatic indexing",
Author="C.~Korycinski and Alan F. Newell",
Journal="The Indexer", Volume=17, Number=1, Month=apr,
Year=1990,
Pages=21#"--"#29,
From="Elborne College/SLIS", ISSN="0019-4131",
SeeAlso="reply by Jones~\cite{Jo:NLPnAuto2}"
}
@Article{Jo:NLPnAuto2,
Title="Natural-language Processing and Automatic Indexing: A
Reply",
Author="Kevin P. Jones",
Journal="The Indexer", Volume=17, Number=2, Month=oct,
Year=1990,
Pages=114#"--"#115,
From="Elborne College/SLIS",
SeeAlso="Original article by Korycinski \& Newell~\cite{Ko:NLPnAuto1}"
}
@InProceedings{We:WhyIF,
Title="Why Indexing Fails The Researcher",
Author="Bella Hass Weinberg",
BookTitle=ASIS88, CROSSREF="ASISv25", Year=1988,
Pages=241#"--"#244
}
@InProceedings{Wi:MeasSuc,
Title="Measures of Success In Searching a Full-text Fact Base",
Author="Barbara M. Widemuth",
BookTitle=ASIS90, CROSSREF="ASISv27", Year=1990,
Pages=104#"--"#109
}
@InProceedings{Be:HMail,
Author="Richard K. Belew and John Rentzepis",
Title="{HyperMail}: Treating Electronic Mail as Literature",
Pages=48#"--"#54,
BookTitle=COIS90, CROSSREF="OIS90", Year=1990,
Annote="hypercard stack for Unix mail, suggest same for Usenet",
Comment="CAN'T FIND PHOTOCOPY",
Keyword="\K{MSc!Justification}"
}
@Article{Cl:E-mail,
Title="Electronic Mail As a Tool for the Information Professional",
Author="Helge Clausen",
Journal="The Electronic Library",
Volume=9, Number=2, Month=apr, Year=1991,
Pages=73#"--"#83,
CallNo="Z678.9.A1E45", LCC="83646084", ISSN="0264-0473",
Keyword="\K{MSc!Justification}"
}
@InProceedings{Fo:EMDig,
Title="An Intelligent Information System for Electronic Mail Digests",
Author="Edward A. Fox",
BookTitle=ASIS87, CROSSREF="ASISv24", Year=1987,
Pages=74#"--"#78,
Annote="The CODER project aimed at investigating the
applicability of AI technniques to information storage and
retrieval. Initial testing on a archive of the AI-List e-mail
mailing list using PROLOG.",
Keyword="\K{System!CODER} $\bullet$ \K{System!SMART}"
}
@InProceedings{Be:HTasKR,
Title="Hypertext as Knowledge Representation",
Author="Richard K. Belew",
BookTitle=AIandHT, CROSSREF="AInHT", Year=1988,
Pages=20#"--"#24
}
@InProceedings{Fe:AutoHM,
Title="Automating Hypermedia Design and Layout",
Author="Steven Feiner",
BookTitle=AIandHT, CROSSREF="AInHT", Year=1988,
Pages=40#"--"#43
}
@InProceedings{De:Inf2Kn,
Title="The Role of Hypertext in Transforming Information Into
Knowledge",
Author="Chris Dede",
BookTitle=AIandHT, CROSSREF="AInHT", Year=1988,
Pages=32#"--"#35,
Annote="HT can be used like an expert system and outliner",
Keyword="\K{MSc!Justification}"
}
@Article{Bu:Memex,
Title="As We May Think",
Author="Vannevar Bush",
Journal="The Atlantic",
Year=1945,
Note="As reprinted by Nelson~\cite{Ne:LitMach} also available in the
World Wide Web at \url{http://www.isg.sfu.ca/%7educhier/misc/vbush/}",
Annote="Believed to be the first description of hypertext",
SeeAlso="Rayward's article about Paul Otlet~\cite{Ra:PO}",
Keyword="\K{Classic}"
}
@InProceedings{Bl:MDDocCl,
Title="Automatic Document Classification: Natural Language
Processing, Statisitical Analysis, and Expert System
Techniques Used Together",
Author="M.~J. Blosseville and G. H\'{e}brail and M.G. Monteil
and N, P\'{e}not",
BookTitle=SIGIR92, CROSSREF="IR92", Year=1992,
Keyword="\K{NLP}"
}
@Article{Ba:LCAnal,
Author="Frank B. Baker",
Title="Information Retrieval Based Upon Latent Class Analysis",
Journal="Association for Computing Machinery Journal",
Volume=9, Year=1962,
Pages=512#"--"#521,
Keyword="\K{LSI}"
}
@InProceedings{Ha:Ess,
Title="Essence: A Resource Discovery System Based on Semantic
File Indexing",
Author="Darren R. Hardy and Michael F. Schwartz",
BookTitle="1993 Winter {USENIX}", Year=1993,
Month=25 # "--" # 29 # "~" # jan, Address="San Diego, CA",
Annote="{uses {\tt grep} to find keywords in documents for
{WAIS} indexing. Includes a description of the Semantic File
System ({SFS}) from {MIT}.}",
Keyword="\K{System!Essence} $\bullet$ \K{System!SFS} $\bullet$
\K{Indexing} $\bullet$ \K{AutoGen}"
}
@Article{Fu:VocProb,
Title="The Vocabulary Problem in Human-System Communication",
Author="G.~W. Furnas and T.~K. Landauer and L.~M. Gomez and
S.~T. Dumais",
Journal=cacm,
Month=nov, Year=1987, Volume=30, Number=11,
Pages=964#"--"#971,
SeeAlso="Krovetz\&Croft (TOIS, 1992)~\cite{Kr:LexAmb}",
Keyword="\K{Classic}"
}
@Article{Kr:LexAmb,
Author="Robert Krovetz and W. Bruce Croft",
Title="Lexical Ambiguity and Information Retrieval",
Journal=tois,
Month=apr, Year=1992, Volume=10, Number=2, Pages=115#"--"#141,
SeeAlso="Furnas et al. `The Vocabulary Problem \ldots' CACM
30(11)~\cite{Fu:VocProb}"
}
@Article{Du:IwLSI,
Title="Improving the Retrieval of Information From External Sources",
Author="Susan T. Dumais",
Journal="Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, \& Computers",
Year=1991, Volume=23, Number=2,
Pages=229#"--"#236,
Keyword="\K{LSI}"
}
@InProceedings{Ni:Mars,
Title="Mars: A Retrieval Tool on the Basis of Morphological Analysis",
Author="G.~Th. Niedermair and G.~Thurmair and I.~B{\"{u}}ttel",
BookTitle=BCS-ACM3, CROSSREF="BCS/ACM3",
Year=1984
}
@Article{SJ:TW,
Author="Karen {Sparck Jones}",
Title="A Statistical Interpretation of Term Specificity and
Its Application in Retrieval",
Journal=jdoc,
Volume=28, Number=1, Month=mar, Year=1972,
Pages=11#"--"#21,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval!weighting} $\bullet$ \K{Classic}",
Annote="Apparently the first attempt at weighting terms by
anything but term frequency"
}
@Article{Wo:ITMS,
Author="S.~K.~M. Wong and Y.~Y. Yao",
Title="An Information-Theoretic Measure of Term Specifity",
Journal=jasis,
Volume=43, Number=1, Month=jan, Year=1992,
Pages=54#"--"#61,
Annote="A derivation of Idf",
SeeAlso="\cite{Salton89}"
}
@Article{Jo:GeoSim,
Author="William P. Jones and George W. Furnas",
Title="Pictures of Relevance: A Geometric Analysis of Similarity
Measures",
Journal=jasis, Volume=38, Number=6, Month=nov, Year=1987,
Pages=420#"--"#442,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval!weighting}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Used in MSc\cite{Bl:MSc}.
\item Compare
\begin{itemize}
\item Zobel \& Moffat (1998)~\cite{Zo:Sim},
\item Ellis et al.\cite{El:MDSOTRS}
\end{itemize}
\end{itemize}"
}
@Article{Go:MetMs,
Author="Lev Goldfarb",
Title="Metric Data Models and Associated Search Strategies",
Journal="{SIGIR} Forum",
Volume=20, Number="1--4", Month="Spring--Summer",
Year=1986,
Pages=7#"--"#11,
Annote="Tree Models",
SeeAlso="\cite{Fa:Forest}",
Keyword="\K{tree models} $\bullet$ \K{Spreading activation}"
}
@InProceedings{Ra:VecM83,
Author="Vijay V. Raghavan and S.~K.~M. Wong",
Title="A Critical Analysis of Vector Space Model for
Information Retrieval",
BookTitle=BCS-ACM3, CROSSREF="BCS/ACM3",
Year=1983,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Ra:VecM86}"
}
@Article{Ra:VecM86,
Author="Vijay V. Raghavan and S.~K.~M. Wong",
Title="A Critical Analysis of Vector Space Model for
Information Retrieval",
Journal=jasis, Volume=37, Number=5, Month=sep,
Year=1986,
Pages=279#"--"#287,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Ra:VecM83}"
}
@InCollection{Ca:MDS,
Author="J.~Douglas Carroll and Phipps Arabie",
Title="Multidimensional Scaling",
BookTitle="Annual Review of Psychology", Year=1980,
Pages=607#"--"#649,
Publisher="Annual Reviews, Inc.",
Note="Volume 31"
}
@UnPublished{Wa:Qiu2,
Author="Carolyn Watters and Michael A. Shepherd and Liwen Qiu",
Title="Task-Oriented Access to Data Files: An Evaluation",
Note="Submitted to the Journal of the American Society for
Information Science\cite{Wa:DalText}",
Year=1993,
SeeAlso="\cite{Wa:DalText}",
Keyword="\K{System!DalText}"
}
@Article{Wa:DalText,
Author="Carolyn Watters and Michael A. Shepherd and Liwen Qiu",
Title="Task-Oriented Access to Data Files: An Evaluation",
Journal=jasis, Volume=45, Number=4, Month=may, Year=1994,
Pages=251#"--"#262,
SeeAlso="\cite{Wa:IPgm}",
Keyword="\K{System!DalText}"
}
@Article{Wa:IPgm,
Author="Carolyn Watters and Michael A. Shepherd",
Title="Shifting the Information Paradigm from Data-Centered to
User-Centered",
Journal=ipm, volume=30, number=4,
month=jul # "--" # aug, Pages=455#"--"#471, Year=1994,
SeeAlso="\cite{Wa:DalText}",
Keyword="\K{System!DalText}"
}
@InProceedings{Ha:StemBad,
Author="Donna Harman",
Title="A Failure Analysis on the Limitations of Suffixing in
an Online Environment",
BookTitle=SIGIR87, CROSSREF="IR87", Year=1987,
Keyword="\K{Stemming} $\bullet$ \K{Information Retrieval}"
}
@InProceedings{Ha:TW,
Author="Donna Harman",
Title="An Experimental Study of Factors Important in Document Ranking",
BookTitle=SIGIR86, CROSSREF="IR86", Year=1986,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval!weighting}"
}
@InProceedings{Sa:GlAna,
Author="Gerard Salton and Chris Buckley",
Title="Approaches to Global Text Analysis",
BookTitle=ASIS90, CROSSREF="ASISv27", Year=1990,
Pages=228#"--"#233,
SeeAlso="\cite{Sa:AuStLHT}"
}
@Article{Sa:AuStLHT,
Author="Gerard Salton and James Allan and Chris Buckley",
Title="Automatic Structuring and Retrieval of Large Text
Files",
Journal=cacm, Volume=37, Number=2, Month=feb, Year=1994,
Pages=97#"--"#108,
SeeAlso="\cite{Sa:GlAna}",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen}",
Annote="An update on the Funk \& Wagnall's CD Encyclop\ae{}dia project
based wholly on information retrieval techniques, including
relevance feedback. The authors used structured, edited homogenous
text. They justify the use of single word based indexing by quoting
that the meaning of a word depends on its usage. They use different
weightings and measures for text chunks of different sizes."
}
@InProceedings{Wo:GVSM,
Title="Generalized Vector Space Model In Information
Retrieval",
Author="S. K. M. Wong and Wojciech Ziarki and Patrick C. N.
Wong",
BookTitle=SIGIR85, CROSSREF="IR85", Year=1985
}
@InCollection{Sw:IREff,
Author="John A. Swets",
Title="Effectiveness of Information Retrieval Methods",
Editor="Belver C. Griffith",
BookTitle="Key Papers in Information Science",
Publisher="Knowledge Industry Publications, Inc.",
Address="White Plains, New York",
Year=1980,
Pages=349#"--"#367,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation}"
}
@Article{Sh:RnP,
Author="Shaw, Jr., W.~M.",
Title="The Foundation of Evaluation",
Journal=jasis, Volume=37, Number=5, Pages=346#"--"#348,
Year=1986, Month=sep,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{theory}"
}
@Article{Ha:IREval2,
Author="Donna Harman",
Title="Evaluation Issues In Information Retrieval",
Journal=ipm,
Volume=28, Number=4, Month=jul # "--" # aug, Year = 1992,
Pages=439#"--"#440,
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Information Retrieval}"
}
@Article{Ro:IREvalCom,
Author="S.~E. Robertson and M.~M. Hancock-Beaulieu",
Title="On the Evaluation of {IR} Systems",
Journal=ipm,
Volume=28, Number=4, Month=jul # "--" # aug, Year = 1992,
Pages=457#"--"#466,
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Information Retrieval}"
}
@Article{Li:RecEval,
Author="Greg Linden",
Title="What is a Good Recommendation Algorithm?",
Journal=cacm,
Month=mar, Year=2009,
URL="http://cacm.acm.org/blogs/blog-cacm/22925-what-is-a-good-recommendation-algorithm/fulltext",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Recommender systems}
$\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@Article{Sa:RSE,
Author="Gerard Salton",
Title="The State of Retrieval System Evaluation",
Journal=ipm,
Volume=28, Number=4, Month=jul # "--" # aug, Year = 1992,
Pages=441#"--"#449,
Keyword="\K{Review}"
}
@Article{TaSu:IRPrag2,
Author="Jean Tague-Sutcliffe",
Title="The Pragmatics of Information Retrieval Experimentation,
Revisited",
Journal=ipm,
Volume=28, Number=4, Month=jul # "--" # aug, Year = 1992,
Pages=467#"--"#490,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$
\K{Classic}"
}
@Article{Ai:EvalHTasIR,
Author="Philippe Aigrain and V\'eronique Longueville",
Title="Evaluation of Navigational Links Between Images",
Journal=ipm, Volume=28, Number=4, Month=jul # "--" # aug,
Year = 1992,
Pages=517#"--"#528,
Annote="The authors are developing methods to evaluate the quality
of links in a hypermedia database of images and descriptive
terms. They compute the image-to-image similarity as a function
$dp$ using a probabilistic model of user behaviour.",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation}"
}
@Article{Ai:ExpansionInIR,
Author="Philippe Aigrain and V\'eronique Longueville",
Title="A Model for the Evaluation of Expansion Techniques in
Information Retrieval Systems",
Journal=jasis,
Volume=45, Number=4, Month=may, Year = 1994,
Pages=225#"--"#234,
Keyword="\K{Evaluation}"
}
@Article{Sa:UsingIRinHT,
Author="Jacques Savoy",
Title="Effectiveness of Information Retrieval Systems Used in
a Hypertext Environment",
Journal="Hypermedia", Volume=5, Number=1, Year=1993,
Pages=23#"--"#46,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation}",
Annote="Does not evaluate hypertext links but rather evaluates
IR methods applied to a network of documents connected by
hypertext links."
}
@Article{Sa:LearningHT,
Author="Jacques Savoy",
Title="A Learning Scheme for Information Retrieval in Hypertext",
Journal=ipm, Volume=30, Number=4, Pages=515#"--"#533, Year=1994,
Annote="An IR system using $p$-norm (fuzzy boolean?) matching
of keyword terms. Relevance feedback seems to be provided
by a hypertext-like mechanism. Assumes that notes that are
relevant to a given query will contain similar concepts.
Contains a lot of background.",
SeeAlso="\cite{Sa:UsingIRinHT}",
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval}"
}
@InProceedings{Ha:Dexter,
Author="Frank Halasz and Mayer Schwartz",
Title="The {Dexter} Hypertext Reference Model",
Booktitle="Proceedings of the Hypertext Standardization Workshop",
Year=1990,
Pages=95#"--"#133,
From="ILL--Royal Ontario Museum (Toronto)--\$15",
SeeAlso="A revised (and Z-less) version appeared in
CACM~\cite{Ha:DexterII}",
Keyword="\K{HT!model!Dexter}"
}
@Article{Ha:DexterII,
Author="Frank Halasz and Mayer Schwartz",
Title="The {Dexter} Hypertext Model",
Journal=cacm, Volume=37, Number=2, Month=feb, Year=1994,
Pages=28#"--"#39,
Note="A revised (and Z-less) revision of an earlier paper
\cite{Ha:Dexter}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Ha:Dexter}",
Keyword="\K{HT!model!Dexter}"
}
@InProceedings{Kw:IITWS,
Author="K. L. Kwok",
Title="An Interpretation of Index Term Weighting Schemes Based
on Document Components",
BookTitle=SIGIR86, CROSSREF="IR86", Year=1986,
Annote="Impractical",
Keyword="\K{Bayesian (probability)}"
}
@Article{Ko:CauT,
Author="Robert R. Korfhage and Jing-Jye Yang",
Title="A Cautionary Tale",
Journal="{SIGIR} Forum",
Volume=25, Number=2, Month="{Fall}", Year=1991,
Pages=104#"--"#105,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$
\K{Classic}",
Annote="There exist test collections that are inappropriate for
testing with.",
SeeAlso="\cite{Fu:VocProb}"
}
@Article{Gr:InterDoc,
Author="Alan Griffiths and H. Claire Luckhurst and Peter
Willett",
Title="Using Interdocument Similarity Information in Document
Retrieval Systems",
Journal=jasis, Volume=37, Number=1, Month=jan, Year=1986,
Pages=3#"--"#11,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval!Cluster} $\bullet$
\K{Ward's Method}"
}
@InProceedings{Sm:ABC,
Title="{ABC}: A Hypermedia System for Artifact-Based Collaboration",
Author="John B. Smith and F. Donelson Smith",
BookTitle=HT91, CROSSREF="HT91",
Keyword="\K{collaboration!(group)} $\bullet$ \K{System} $\bullet$
\K{groupware}"
}
@Article{An:HTnNLP,
Title="Enhancing hypertext application using {NLP} techniques",
Author="R.~E. Anderson and P.~J. Sallis and W.~K. Yeap",
Journal="Journal of Information Science",
Volume=17, Year=1991, Pages=49#"--"#56,
Keyword="\K{NLP} $\bullet$ \K{System!CDWord}"
}
@Article{Ra:MUCH,
Title="Collaborative hypertext and the {MUCH} system",
Author="Roy Rada and Akmal Zeb and Geeng-Neg You and Antonios
Michailidis and Mahmoud Mhashi",
Journal="Journal of Information Science",
Volume=17, Year=1991, Pages=191#"--"#196,
Keyword="\K{groupware} $\bullet$ \K{System} $\bullet$ \K{HT!model!Dexter}
$\bullet$ \K{System!MUCH}"
}
@Article{Be:IFIR,
Title="Information filtering and information retrieval: two sides of the
same coin?",
Author="Nicholas J. Belkin and W. Bruce Croft",
Journal=cacm, Month=dec, Year=1992,
Volume=35, Number=12, Pages=29 # "--" # 38,
Keyword="\K{Information Filtering} $\bullet$ \K{Classic}"
}
@Article{Fo:PI,
Author="Peter W. Foltz and Susan T. Dumais",
Title="Personalized Information Delivery: An Analysis of Information
Filtering Methods",
Journal=cacm, Volume=35, Number=12, Pages=51 #"--"# 60,
Month=dec, Year=1992,
Keyword="\K{Information Filtering}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:ILens,
Title="The Information Lens: An Intelligent System for
Information Sharing in Organizations",
Author="Thomas W. Malone and Kenneth R. Grant and Franklyn A. Turbak",
BookTitle=SIGCHI86, CROSSREF="CHI86", Year=1986,
Annote="Rule-based information filtering using tagged messages",
Keyword="\K{Information Filtering} $\bullet$ \K{Fisheye view}
$\bullet$ \K{System!Information Lens}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item VISAR~\cite{Cl:VISAR},
\item TOPIC~\cite{Ha:AutoGen},
\item Fisheye Views~\cite{Fu:FE}
\end{itemize}"
}
@InProceedings{Yu:AdapCl,
Author="C.~T. Yu and Y.~T. Wang and C.~H. Chen",
Title="Adaptive Document Clustering",
BookTitle=SIGIR85, CROSSREF="IR85", Year=1985,
Pages=197#"--"#203,
Keyword="\K{Cluster}"
}
@InProceedings{Vo:ClRev,
Author="Ellen M. Voorhees",
Title="The Cluster Hypothesis Revisited",
BookTitle=SIGIR85, CROSSREF="IR85", Year=1985,
Pages=188#"--"#196,
Keyword="\K{Cluster}"
}
@InProceedings{Pa:IdentCon,
Author="Chris D. Paice and Paul A. Jones",
Title="The Identification of Important Concepts in Highly
Structured Technical Papers",
BookTitle="{SIGIR} '93 Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual
International {ACM SIGIR} Conference on Research and Development
in Information Retrieval",
Editor="Robert Korfhage and Edie Rasmussen and Peter Willett",
Publisher="{ACM}",
Organization="{SIGIR}",
Address="Pittsburgh, {PA}, {USA}",
Month="27 " # jun # "--1 " # jul, Year=1993,
HowPublished="{SIGIR Forum} (v.27 no.2)",
Pages=69#"--"#78,
Keyword="\K{Concept Identification} $\bullet$ \K{Document Analysis}"
}
@InProceedings{Ha:TRECOview,
Author="Donna Harman",
Title="Overview of the First {TREC} Conference",
BookTitle=SIGIR93, CROSSREF="IR93", Year=1993,
Pages=36#"--"#47,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval!TREC}"
}
@InProceedings{TaSu:TRECcomp,
Author="Jean Tague-Sutcliffe and James Blustein",
Title="A Statistical Analysis of the {TREC-3} Data",
BookTitle="Text Retrieval Conference", Month=nov, Year=1994,
Pages=385 # "--" # 398,
Address="Gaithersburg, {MD}, {USA}",
Organization="National Institute of Standards and Technology"
}
@Article{Li:DR-LINK,
Title="{DR-LINK} {Document Retrieval} using {LINguistic Knowledge}:
Project Description",
Author="Elizabeth D. Liddy and Sung H. Myaeng",
Journal=sigir, Volume=26, Number=2, Month="{Fall}", Year=1992,
Keyword="\K{System} $\bullet$ \K{Concept Identification}"
}
@InProceedings{Bo:CluHT,
Author="Rodrigo A. Botafogo",
Title="Cluster Analysis for Hypertext Systems",
BookTitle=SIGIR93, CROSSREF="IR93", Year=1993,
Pages=116#"--"#125,
SeeAlso="HT Metrics by Botafogo et al.~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics}",
Keyword="\K{Cluster}"
}
@Article{Ra:SMLHT,
Title="Small, Medium, and Large Hypertext",
Author="Roy Rada",
Journal=ipm,
Volume=27, Number=6, Year=1991,
Pages=659#"--"#677,
Annote="Identifies three types of HT. An overview of the state of HT;
Traces origin of word `hypertext' to 1704.",
SeeAlso="\cite{Ra:reuse}",
Keyword="\K{Review}"
}
@Article{Ra:reuse,
Author="Roy Rada",
Title="Hypertext Writing and Document Reuse: The Role of a Semantic
Net",
Journal=EP-odd, Volume=3, Number=3, Pages=125#"--"#140,
Month=aug, Year=1990,
Keyword="\K{Semantic net} $\bullet$ \K{Classification}"
}
@Article{Ra:Tbook2HT,
Title="Converting a Textbook to Hypertext",
Author="Roy Rada",
Journal=tois,
Volume=10, Number=3, Month=jul, Year=1992,
Pages=294#"--"#315,
Keyword="\K{HT!Conversion}",
SeeAlso="From Text to Expertext (the book converted) \cite{Ra:Expertext}"
}
@Article{Bo:HTMetrics,
Title="Structural Analysis of Hypertexts: Identifying Hierarchies
and Useful Metrics",
Author="Rodrigo~A. Botafogo and Ehud Rivlin and Ben Schneiderman",
Journal=tois,
Volume=10, Number=2, Month=apr, Year=1992, Pages=142#"--"#180,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/146802.146826",
Annote="B. et al. develop metrics that may be used to identify and
classify hierarchical link structures in hypertexts. They
applied their techniques to simple handmade hypertexts.",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Metric} $\bullet$
\K{System!Hyperties} $\bullet$ \K{Classic}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item applications to browsing (Rivlin et al. in CACM
37(2)~\cite{Ri:NHDST}
\item McE's application to user trails (HT'99~\cite{McE:HT99} to
start),
\item validity confirmed by Yamada et al. (TOCHI
2(4)~\cite{Ya:ValidMet})
\item application to lostness measure by Gwizdka \& Spence in
Interacting with Computers v.19~\cite{Gw:IMLSWN}
\item A survey of Web metrics in ACM CompSurv~\cite{Dh:SWM}
\item The Connectivity Sonar in HT'03~\cite{Am:TCS}
\item A hypertext model based on Huffman coding in HT'01~\cite{Co:HTMHC}
\end{itemize}"
}
@InProceedings{Co:HTMHC
,Author = "Chris Coulston and Theresa M. Vitolo"
,Title = "A hypertext metric based on {Huffman} coding"
,CROSSREF="HT01"
,Year=2001
,Pages = 243#"--"#244
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/504216.504275"
,SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Botafogo et al.~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics}
\item Towards a practical measure of hypertext usability by
Pauline Smith~\cite{Sm:TPMHU}
\end{itemize}"
,Keyword="\K{Metric} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$
\K{information seeking}"
}
@InProceedings{Am:TCS
,Author = "Einat Amitay and David Carmel and Adam Darlow and Ronny
Lempel and Aya Soffer"
,Title = "The connectivity sonar: detecting site functionality by
structural patterns"
,CROSSREF="HT03"
,Year = 2003
,Pages = 38#"--"#47
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/900051.900060"
,SeeAlso="Structural Analysis of Hypertexts: Identifying Hierarchies
and Useful Metrics by Botafogo et al.~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics}"
,Keyword="\K{Metric}"
}
@Article{Dh:SWM
,Author = "Devanshu Dhyani and Wee Keong Ng and Sourav S. Bhowmick"
,Title = "A survey of Web metrics"
,Journal = compsurv
,Volume = 34 ,Number = 4 ,Year = 2002 ,Pages = 469#"--"#503
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/592642.592645"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
,SeeAlso="Botafogo et al.~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics}"
,Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Metric} $\bullet$
\K{System!Hyperties} $\bullet$ \K{Survey}"
}
@Article{Ri:NHDST,
Title="Navigating in Hyperspace: Designing a Structure-Based
Toolbox",
Author="Rhud Rivlin and Rodrigo Botafogo and Ben Shneiderman",
Journal=cacm, month=feb, year=1994, volume=37, number=2,
Pages=87 # "--" # 96,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/175235.175242",
SeeAlso="HT Metrics~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics}",
Keyword="\K{Metric}",
}
@InProceedings{Hu:StEvalIR,
Title="Using Statistical Testing in the Evaluation of Retrieval
Experiments",
Author="David Hull",
BookTitle=SIGIR93, CROSSREF="IR93", Year=1993,
Pages=329#"--"#338,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation}"
}
@InProceedings{Ch:VnQ,
Title="Information Visualization and Interactive Querying for
Online Documentation and Electronic Books",
Author="Mark H. Chignell and Gene Golochinsky and Ferdie Poblete
and Sarah Zuberec",
BookTitle="Proceedings of {CASCON} '93 Volume {II}: Distributed
Computing", Year=1993,
Organization="{IBM} Canada Ltd. Laboratory",
Editor="A. Gawman and W. M. Gentleman and E. Kidd and P. Larson and
J. Slonim",
Address="Toronto, Canada"
}
@InProceedings{Ch:BTQ,
Title="Browsing Through Querying: Designing for Electronic Books",
Author="Nipon Charoenkitkarn and Jim Tam and Mark H. Chignell and
Gene Golovchinsky",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Pages=206#"--"#216
}
@UnPublished{Ba:BTB,
Title="Back to Basics: The Role of the Author in Hypertext",
Author="Lisa Baron and Edward Brown and Mark H. Chignell",
Keyword="\K{link types}",
Note="Contact: Mark H. Chignell
$\langle$\path{chignel@dgp.utoronto.ca}$\rangle$ +1 (416) 978-8951
$\ldots$"
}
@Article{Fi:VRforPalmtops,
Title="Virtual Reality for Palmtop Computers",
Author="George W. Fitzmaurice and Shumin Zhai and Mark H.
Chignell",
Journal=tois, volume=11, number=3, Month=jul, Year=1993,
Pages=197#"--"#218
}
@InProceedings{Go:QRL,
Title="{Queries-R-Links}: Graphical Markup for Text Navigation",
Author="Gene Golovchinsky and Mark Chignell",
Month="24--29" # apr,
Pages=454#"--"#460,
BookTitle="{INTERCHI} '93", Year=1993,
Organization="{ACM}",
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$
\K{System!Queries-R-Links}"
}
@Article{Ch:UCI,
Title="User Controlled Interfaces for Information Exploration",
Author="Mark Chignell and Gene Golovchinsky",
Journal="?? Asked Chignell for info 6 July 1994 ??", Year=1994
}
@Article{Sm:Xtract,
Title="Retrieving Collocations from Text: {Xtract}",
Author="Frank Smadja",
Journal="Computational Linguistics",
Month=mar, Year=1993, Volume=19, Number=1, Pages=143#"--"#177,
Keyword="\K{System!Xtract}"
}
@Article{McK:MDConc,
Title="The Multi-Dimensional Concordance: A New Tool For Literary
Research",
Author="Alastair McKinnon",
Journal="Computers and the Humanities", Volume=27,
Pages=165#"--"#183, Year=1993
}
@InProceedings{Cl:HTI,
Title="Indexing in a Hypertext Database",
Author="Chris Clifton and Hector Garcia-Molina",
BookTitle=VLDB90, CROSSREF="VLDB90",
Pages=36#"--"#49,
Annote="Concept of HT is that a db can be partitioned into
subgraphs which are then searched; Seems to be an attempt to extend
databases without much interest in hypertext"
}
@InProceedings{We:SemAnaDB,
Title="Incorporating a Semantic Analysis into a Document Retrieval
Strategy",
Author="Edgar B. Wendlandt and James R. Driscoll",
BookTitle=SIGIR91, CROSSREF="IR91", Year=1991,
Pages=270#"--"#279,
Annote="An approach based on database concept of semantic modeling
(particularly entities and relationships between entities). They
assign thematic r\^oles and entity relationships as document
identifiers. Documents are classified by the keyword they
contain and retrieval shows the ranked list of clusters. The
system automatically converts natural language queries to
keywords, e.g. `how long' $\to$ `duration'.",
Keyword="\K{Concept Identification} $\bullet$ \K{AI}"
}
@InProceedings{Bu:RetHet,
Author="Forbes J. Burkowski",
Title="Retrieval Activities in a Database Consisting of
Heterogeneous Collections of Structured Text",
BookTitle=SIGIR92, CROSSREF="IR92", Year=1992,
Pages=112#"--"#125,
Annote="1)~A containment model for operations and data structures on
a hierarchically structured text. 2)~Discussion of a modular
interface so the text can be treated like a database.",
Keyword="\K{HT!model}"
}
@Article{Fa:PhrI,
Title="The Effectiveness of a Nonsyntactic Approach to Automatic
Phrase Indexing for Document Retrieval",
Author="Joel L. Fagan", Journal=jasis, Volume=40, Number=2,
Month=mar, Year=1989, Pages=115#"--"#132,
SeeAlso="\cite{Pa:IdentCon}",
Keyword="\K{Concept Identification} $\bullet$
\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{Classic}",
Annote="differs from Salton et al: doesn't use thesaurus classes,
uses adjacency and frequency instead. p.126 suggestion for
approximate phrase matching."
}
@Article{El:ILC,
Title="On the Creation of Hypertext Links in Full-Text Documents:
Measurement of Inter-Linker Consistency",
Author="David Ellis and Jonathan Furner-Hines and Peter Willett",
Journal=jdoc, Volume=50, Number=2, Month=jun, Year=1994,
Pages=67#"--"#98,
Keyword="\K{Metric} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Classic}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item JASIS 1996 article~\cite{El:OCHLF},
\item SIGIR 1994 paper~\cite{El:ILCREHT},
\item Computing Survey's 1999 article~\cite{Fu:ILCCS99}
\end{itemize}"
}
@Article{El:OCHLF,
Author="David Ellis and Jonathan Furner and Peter Willett",
Title="On the Creation of Hypertext Links in Full-Text Documents:
Measurement of Retrieval Effectiveness",
Journal=JASIS, Volume=47, Number=4, Pages=287 # "--" # 300,
Month=apr, Year=1996,
SeeAlso="JDoc paper~\cite{El:ILC}, and
Computing Surveys paper~\cite{Fu:ILCCS99}"
}
@InProceedings{El:ILCREHT,
Author="David Ellis and Jonathan Furner-Hines and Peter Willett",
Title="On the Measurement of Inter-Linker Consistency and Retrieval
Effectiveness in Hypertext Databases",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the 17th Annual International ACM-SIGIR
Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval",
Editor="W. Bruce Croft and C. J. van Rijsbergen",
Address="Dublin, Ireland",
Month="3--6 " # jul,
Pages=51#"--"#60,
Publisher="Springer Verlag", Year=1994, ISBN="3-540-19889-X",
SeeAlso="\cite{El:ILC,El:OCHLF,Fu:ILCCS99}"
}
@Article{Fu:ILCCS99,
Title="Inter-linker consistency in the manual construction of hypertext
documents",
Author="Jonathan Furner and David Ellis and Peter Willett",
Journal="{ACM} Computing Surveys", Volume=31, Number="4es",
Month=dec, Year=1999,
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Original articles: \cite{El:OCHLF,El:ILCREHT}
\item Refs. for Dice measure: \begin{itemize}
\item Jones \& Furnas~\cite{Jo:GeoSim}
\item Ellis et al.~\cite{El:MDSOTRS}
\item Salton~\cite[Table~10.1, p.\,318]{Salton89}
\end{itemize}
\end{itemize}",
Note="Electronic publication only. Available from
\url{http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/345966.346008},
See Ashman and Simpson's editoral overview in printed
journal~\cite{As:CSESHTM}"
}
@Article{Le:ConDist,
Author="Joon Ho Lee and Myoung Ho Kim and Yoon Joon Lee",
Title="Information Retrieval Based on Conceptual Distance in {IS-A}
Hierarchies",
Journal=jdoc, Volume=49, Number=2, Month=jun, Year=1993,
Pages=188#"--"#207,
SeeAlso="\cite{Hu:GenCon}",
Keyword="\K{Boolean}"
}
@InCollection{Ch:Browsing,
Title="Browsing: A Multidimensional Framework",
Author="Shan-Ju Chang and Ronald E. Rice",
BookTitle=ARIST, Volume=28, Year=1993,
Pages=231#"--"#276,
Editor="Martha E. Williams",
Publisher="Learned Information, Inc.",
Keyword="\K{Browsing}"
}
@Article{Ca:BrHT,
Title="Browsing in hypertext: a cognitive study",
Author="Erran Carmel and Stephen Crawford and Hsinchun Chen",
Journal="IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics",
Volume=22, Number=5, Month=sep#"--"#oct, Year=1992,
Page=865#"--"#884,
Keyword="\K{Browsing}"
}
@InProceedings{McA:HTnI,
Author="Ray McAleese",
Title="Hypertext: The Way To Information; The Information Is",
BookTitle=Info90, CROSSREF="Info90",
Pages=28#"--"#37,
Annote="Brief overview of some systems and applications of
hypertext to managing information. Similar to Horn's
book\cite{Horn} in the hypertext-like presentation.",
Keyword="\K{HT!General!(Background)} $\bullet$ \K{System!QCIP}
$\bullet$ \K{System!NoteCards} $\bullet$ \K{System!KIM} $\bullet$
\K{System!LOCKE} $\bullet$ \K{System!Semantic network}"
}
@InProceedings{Oz:TuneI,
Author="Esen Ozkarahan and Fazli Can",
Title="An Automatic and Tunable Document Indexing System",
BookTitle=SIGIR86, CROSSREF="IR86", Year=1986,
Pages=234#"--"#243
}
@InProceedings{Co:Coombs,
Author="James H. Coombs",
Title="Hypertext, Full Text, and Automatic Linking",
BookTitle=SIGIR90, CROSSREF="IR90", Year=1990,
Pages=83#"--"#98,
Annote="use of `search \& query' to allow users to build dynamic HT
structures proposed and tested. Includes examples of HT in a
teaching environment (Dickens Web)",
Keyword="\K{System!IRIS}"
}
@InProceedings{Fi:AICS,
Title="Information Access in Complex, Poorly Structured Information
Spaces",
Author="Gerhard Fischer and Curt Stevens",
BookTitle=SIGCHI91, CROSSREF="CHI91",
Pages=63#"--"#70,
Annote="An attempt to structure information found in Usenet into
virtual newsgroups. Presents a new user interfaces and suggests
the use of threads. Use of agents to suggest articles to the
user based on heuristics (no analysis of massages just
filters).",
Keyword="\K{System!InfoScope} $\bullet$ \K{System!Information Lens}"
}
@InProceedings{Bo:IICont,
Author="Guy A. Boy",
Title="Indexing Hypertext Documents in Context",
Keyword="\K{HT!model!CID}",
BookTitle=HT91, CROSSREF="HT91"
}
@InProceedings{Be:VolHT,
Author="Mark Bernstein and Jay David Bolter and Michael Joyce and
Elli Mylanos",
Title="Architectures for Volatile Hypertext",
BookTitle=HT91, CROSSREF="HT91",
Pages=243#"--"#260
}
@InProceedings{Bi:ModDynHT,
Author="Michael Bieber",
Title="Issues in Modelling a ``Dynamic'' Hypertext Interface
for Non-Hypertext Systems",
BookTitle=HT91, CROSSREF="HT91",
Pages=203#"--"#217
}
@Article{Ma:RoleOfExp,
Author="Gary Marchiono and Sandra Dwiggins and Andrew Katz and Xia
Lin",
Title="Information Seeking in Full-Text End-User-Oriented Search
Systems: The Roles of Domain and Search Expertise",
Journal="Library \& Information Science Research",
Volume=15, Number=1, Month="Winter", Year=1993,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Expertise} $\bullet$
\K{information seeking}"
}
@InProceedings{Wi:ERSD,
Author="Ross Wilkinson",
Title="Effective Retrieval of Structured Documents",
BookTitle=SIGIR94, CROSSREF="IR94", Year=1994,
Annote="Considers formulas for retrieving relevant parts of
documents in response to queries. Not much.",
Keyword = "\K{Categorization}"
}
@Article{Ta:CollComp,
Author="David W. Tank and John J. Hopfield",
Title="Collective Computation in Neuronlike Circuits",
Journal="Scientific American", Month=dec, Year=1987,
Pages=104#"--"#114,
Keyword="\K{Neural net}"
}
@Article{Di:EPC,
Author="Steve Ditlea",
Title="The Electronic Paper Chase",
Journal=SciAm, Month=nov, Year=2001, Pages=50#"--"#55,
URL="http://www.sciam.com/2001/1101issue/1101ditlea.html",
Keyword="\K{hardware!digital paper}, \K{hardware!e-paper}",
}
@Unpublished{Ha:AmstM,
Author="Lynda Hardman and Dick C. A. Bulterman and Guido {van
Rossum}",
Title="The {Amsterdam} Hypermedia Model: extending hypertext to
support real multimedia",
Note="Lynda.Hardman@cwi.nl",
Keyword="\K{HT!model!Dexter} $\bullet$ \K{HT!model!Amsterdam}",
Annote="Combines Dexter hypertext model and {CMIF} multimedia
model to create a model of synchronized hypermedia."
}
@InProceedings{Be:contours,
Author="Mark Bernstein and Michael Joyce and David Levine",
Title="Contours of Constructive Hypertexts",
BookTitle=ECHT92, CROSSREF="ECHT-92", Pages=161#"--"#170,
Annote="Subjective descriptions of what is good and bad about
hypertext.",
Keyword="\K{HT!Design} $\bullet$ \K{HT!Literary hypertext}"
}
@InProceedings{deBra:Ext,
Author="Paul De Bra and Geert-Jan Houben and Yoram Kornatzky",
Title="An Extensible Data Model for Hyperdocuments",
BookTitle=ECHT92, CROSSREF="ECHT-92",
Pages=222#"--"#231,
Annote="nodes, links and anchors are basic units",
Keyword="\K{HT!model}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:HYDESIGN,
Author="Michael Marmann and Gunter Schlageter",
Title="Towards a Better Support for Hypermedia Structuring: The
{HYDESIGN} Model",
BookTitle=ECHT92, CROSSREF="ECHT-92",
Pages=232#"--"#241,
Keyword="\K{link types!taxonomy of} $\bullet$ \K{HT!model}"
}
@InProceedings{Jo:ImConv,
Author="Robert Alun Jones and Rand Spiro",
Title="Imagined Conversations: The Relevance of Hypertext,
Pragmatism, and Cognitive Flexibility Theory to the
Interpretation of ``Classic Texts'' in Intellectual History",
BookTitle=ECHT92, CROSSREF="ECHT-92",
Pages=141#"--"#148,
Keyword="\K{MSc!Justification}"
}
@InProceedings{Gu:Info,
Author="Catherine Guinan and Alan F. Smeaton",
Title="Information Retrieval from Hypertext Using Dynamically
Planned Guided Tours",
BookTitle=ECHT92, CROSSREF="ECHT-92",
Annote="Given a small, hand crafted HT their system will rank
nodes by order of usefullness to a natural language query and
present them to the user in order.",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Tague-Sutcliffe's \emph{Measuring
Information}~\cite{Jean'sBook},
\item Amsterdam Model~\cite{Ha:AmstM}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{HT!Guided Tour}"
}
@InProceedings{Fr:HTnRet,
Author="H.~P. Frei and D.~Stieger",
Title="Making use of Hypertext links when retrieving information",
BookTitle=ECHT92, CROSSREF="ECHT-92",
Annote="An excellent presentation of HT as a graph with a
distinction between semantic and reference links. Uses spreading
activation to maintain accurate similarity measures.",
SeeAlso="\cite{Fr:SemLinks,Sa:UsingIRinHT}",
Keyword="\K{Spreading activation} $\bullet$ \K{HT!Intro}"
}
@Article{Fr:SemLinks,
Author="H.~P. Frei and D.~Stieger",
Title="The Use of Semantic Links in Hypertext Information Retrieval",
Journal=ipm, Volume=31, Number=1, Pages=1#"--"#13, Year=1995,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{Indexing} $\bullet$
\K{Spreading activation}",
Annote="Improved retrieval by using spreading activation of
weights following HT links. Where else have I seen this? The Tree
paper in the MSc perhaps.",
SeeAlso="\cite{Fr:HTnRet}"
}
@InProceedings{Mo:OOSE,
Author="J.~Monnard and J~Pasquier-Boltuck",
Title="An Object-Oriented Scripting Environment for {WEBS}s
Electronic Book System",
BookTitle=ECHT92, CROSSREF="ECHT-92",
Keyword="\K{System!WEBSs}",
SeeAlso="Amsterdam Model~\cite{Ha:AmstM} and related",
Annote="WEBS is a hypertext system for creating and using HTs.
The scripts allow `logico-mathematical' models to perform complex
manipulations and computations."
}
@InProceedings{Qu:Comb,
Author="Vincent Quint and Ir\`{e}ne Vatton",
Title="Combining Hypertext and Structured Documents in {Grif}",
BookTitle=ECHT92, CROSSREF="ECHT-92",
Pages=23#"--"#32,
Keyword="\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{SGML} $\bullet$ \K{System!Grif}"
}
@InProceedings{Ri:ELit,
Author="Ian Ritchie",
Title="The Future of Electronic Literacy: Will Hypertext Ever Find
Acceptance",
BookTitle=ECHT92, CROSSREF="ECHT-92",
Pages=1, Note="Extended Abstract only",
Keyword="\K{HT!General}"
}
@InProceedings{Mi:HTDial,
Title="Hypertext and the Author/Reader Dialogue",
Author="Susan Michalak and Mary Coney",
Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Design!Issues} $\bullet$
\K{Rhetoric} $\bullet$ \K{Literary Theory} $\bullet$
\K{Misc!(Other field)}",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Pages=174#"--"#182,
Annote="Literary theory and HT"
}
@InProceedings{Ha:Context,
Title="Links in Hypermedia: the Requirement for Context",
Author="Lynda Hardman and Dick C. A. Butlerman and Guido {van
Rossum}",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Pages=183#"--"#191,
SeeAlso="Amsterdam Model info~\cite{Ha:AmstM}",
Keyword="\K{HT!model!Amsterdam} $\bullet$ \K{hypermedia}",
Annote="Context = timing info"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:Sea,
Title="Searching for the Missing Link: Discovering Implicit
Structure in Spatial Hypertext",
Author="Catherine C. Marshall and Shipman, {III}, Frank M.",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen!(Document Analysis)} $\bullet$
\K{HT!Spatial hypertext}",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Pages=217#"--"#230,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/168750.168826"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:ERPP
,Title="Exploring the relationship between personal and public
annotations"
,Author="Catherine C. Marshall and A. J. Bernheim Brush"
,BookTitle="Proceedings of the 2004 joint {ACM}/{IEEE} conference on
Digital libraries"
,Year=2004 ,Month="07--11 "#jun ,Address="Tucson, {AZ}, {USA}"
,Pages=349#"--"#357
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/996350.996432"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Ro:Cog,
Title="Cognitive Processing of Hyperdocuments: When Does
Nonlinearity Help?",
Author="Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Rouet",
BookTitle=ECHT92, CROSSREF="ECHT-92",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Review}",
SeeAlso="Charney's essay~\cite{Ch:EoH},
Rouet's essay in HT \& Cognition~\cite{Ro:SLHT}",
Annote="An excellent survey of cognitive studies of the use
of hypertext.",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/168466.168508"
}
@InCollection{Ro:SLHT,
Title="Studying and Learning with Hypertext: Empirical studies and
their implications",
Author="Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Rouet and Jarmo J. Levonen",
BookTitle="Hypertext and Cognition",
Editor="Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Rouet and Jarmo J. Levonen and Andrew Dillon
and Rand J. Spiro",
Publisher="Lawrence Erlbaum Associates", Year=1996
}
@InProceedings{Ma:VIKI,
Title="{VIKI}: Spatial Hypertext Supporting Emergent Structure",
Author="Catherine C. Marshall and Shipman, {III}, Frank M. and James
H. Coombs",
BookTitle=ECHT94, CROSSREF="ECHT-94",
Keyword="\K{System!VIKI} $\bullet$ \K{HT!Spatial hypertext}",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/192757.192759"
}
@Article{Ma:SpatialHT,
Author="Catherine C. Marshall and Shipman, {III}, Frank M.",
Title="Spatial Hypertext: designing for change",
Journal=cacm, Volume=38, Number=8, Month=aug, Year=1995,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/208344.208350",
Keyword="\K{HT!Spatial hypertext}"
}
@InProceedings{Pe:SST,
Title="Information Retrieval Techniques for Hypertext in the
Semi-Structured Toolkit",
Author="Gary Perlman",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen!Conversion}"
}
@InProceedings{Pe:D/E,
Title="Asynchronous Design/Evaluation Methods for Hypertext
Technology Development",
Author="Gary Perlman",
BookTitle=HT89, CROSSREF="HT89",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation}"
}
@InProceedings{Pe:EvalHM,
Title="Evaluating Hypermedia Systems",
Author="G.~Perlman and D.~Egan and S.~Ehrlich and
G.~Marchionini and J.~Nielsen and B.~Schneiderman",
BookTitle=SIGCHI90, CROSSREF="CHI90",
Annote="`Several different approaches to usability evaluation
are contrasted' --- Nielsen\cite[p.236]{Ni:Bib90}",
Note="Position statments from the participants of a panel
discussion.",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation}"
}
@InProceedings{Ch:HieNet,
Title="{HieNet}: A User-Centered Approach for Automatic Link
Generation",
Author="Daniel T. Chang",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen}"
}
@InProceedings{Sa:Sel,
Title="Selective Text Utilization and Text Traversal",
Author="Gerard Salton and James Allan",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
SeeAlso="\cite{Sa:Sel95} in IJHCS 1995",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen} $\bullet$ \K{Concept Identification} $\bullet$
\K{full text}"
}
@Article{Sa:Sel95,
Title="Selective Text Utilization and Text Traversal",
Author="Gerard Salton and James Allan",
Journal=IJHCS, Year=1995, Volume=43, Pages=483 # "--" # 497,
SeeAlso="\cite{Sa:Sel} in HT'93",
Keyword="\K{HT!AutoGen} $\bullet$ \K{Concept Identification} $\bullet$
\K{full text}"
}
@InProceedings{To:LinkRes,
Title="Hypertext by Link-Resolving Components",
Author="Frank Wm. Tompa and G. Elizabeth Blake and Darell
R. Raymond",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Keyword="\K{System!OEDP} "
}
@InProceedings{La:Weasel,
Title="The Knowledge Weasel Hypermedia Annotation System",
Author="Daryl T. Lawton and Ian E. Smith",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Keyword="\K{System!Knowledge Weasel} $\bullet$ \K{collaboration}
$\bullet$ \K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Pa:cubes,
Title="Hypercubes Grow on Trees (and Other Observations from the
Land of Hypersets)",
Author="H. {Van Dyke} Parunak",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Keyword="\K{System!HyperSet} $\bullet$ \K{tree models}"
}
@InProceedings{vanD:DoNot,
Author="H. {Van Dyke} Parunak",
Title="Don't Link Me In: Set Base Hypermedia for Taxonomic
Reasoning",
Pages=233#"--"#242,
BookTitle=HT91, CROSSREF="HT91",
Keyword="\K{taxonomy} $\bullet$ \K{Cluster!(not)}",
Annote="Nodes are grouped into sets/navigation w/in sets and at
intersection of sets",
SeeAlso="\cite{Co:gIBIS}"
}
@InProceedings{Ic:Access,
Title="Another Dimension to Hypermedia Access",
Author="Satoshi Ichimura and Yutaka Matsushita",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Keyword="\K{System!OpenBook} "
}
@InProceedings{Ha:Microcosm,
Title="The {Microcosm} Link Service",
Author="Wendy Hall and Gary Hill and Hugh Davis",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Note="See also \url{http://www.multicosm.com/microcosm/}",
Keyword="\K{System!Microcosm}"
}
@InProceedings{Hi:OpenWWW,
Title="Applying Open Hypertext Principles to the {WWW}",
Author="Garry Hill and Dave de Roure and Les Carr",
Editor="Sylvain {Fra\"{\i}ss\'e} and Franca Garzotto and Tomas
Isakowitz and Jocelyne Nanard and Marc Nanard",
BookTitle="International Workshop on Hypermedia Design",
Year=1995, Pages=193#"--"#201,
Keyword="\K{System!Microcosm} $\bullet$ \K{System!Open}"
}
@InProceedings{No:Fish,
Title="Exploring Large Hyperdocuments: Fisheye Views of Nested
Networks",
Author="Emanuel G. Noik",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Keyword="\K{Fisheye view}"
}
@Article{Ch:EFCW,
Title="An extended fisheye view browser for collaborative writing",
Author="C. Chen and R. Rada and A. Zeb",
Comment="C[hamoei] Chen, R[oy] Rada, and A[kmal] Zeb",
Journal=IJHCS, Volume=40, Year=1994, Pages=859 # "--" # 878,
Annote="I only have the first page",
Keyword="\K{Fisheye view}"
}
@Article{Ko:ALIWEB,
Author="Martijn Koster",
Title="{ALIWEB} --- {Archie-like} indexing in the {WEB}",
Journal=isdn, Volume=27, Year=1994, Pages=175#"--"#182
}
@Article{Sm:CAJUN,
Author="Philip~N. Smith and David~F. Brailsford and David~R. Evans
and Leon Harrison and Steve~G. Probets and Peter~E. Sutton",
Title="Journal publishing with {Acrobat}: the {CAJUN} project",
Journal=EP-odd, Volume=6, Number=4, Pages=481#"--"#493,
Month=dec, Year= 1993,
Keyword="\K{e-pubs} $\bullet$ \K{System!Acrobat/PDF}"
}
@Article{Ha:Med,
Author="Koichi Hayashi and Akifumi Sekijima",
Title="Mediating Interface Between Hypertext and Structured
Documents",
Journal=EP-odd, Volume=6, Number=4, Pages=423#"--"#434,
Month=dec, Year=1993,
Keyword="\K{Authoring} "
}
@Article{Ku:Gram,
Author="Eila Kuikka and Martti Penttonen",
Title="Tranformation of Structured Document With the Use of
Grammar",
Journal=EP-odd, Volume=6, Number=4, Pages=373#"--"#383,
Month=dec, Year=1993,
SeeAlso="From Text to Hypertext by Indexing by Slaminen \textit{et
al.}~\cite{Sa:T2HTbI}"
}
@Article{Ni:SGML+ODA,
Author="Charles~K. Nicholas and Lawrence~A. Welsch",
Title="In the Interchangeability of {SGML} and {ODA}",
Journal=EP-odd, Volume=5, Number=3, Pages=105#"--"#130,
Month=sep, Year=1992,
Keyword="\K{SGML} $\bullet$ \K{ODA} $\bullet$ \K{markup}"
}
@Article{Sa:epo,
Author="Jacques Savoy and Daniel Desbois",
Title="Information Retrieval in Hypertext Systems: An Approach
Using {Bayesian} Networks",
Journal=EP-odd, Volume=4, Number=2, Pages=87#"--"#108,
Month=jun, Year=1991,
Keyword="\K{Bayesian (probability)} $\bullet$ \K{HT!AutoGen}",
SeeAlso="Savoy's Hypermedia paper~\cite{Sa:UsingIRinHT}"
}
@Article{Pa:pop,
Author="R.~Pausch and J.~Detmer",
Title="Node Popularity as a Hypertext Browsing Aid",
Journal=EP-odd, Volume=3, Number=4, Pages=227#"--"#234,
Month=nov, Year=1990,
Annote="The well-trodden path method of creating hypertext
links. The authors do not claim that this method creates good
hypertext, but it may be useful for evaluation.",
SeeAlso="Wexelblat and Maes's Footprints: History-rich Web
browsing~\cite{We:Footprints}",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation}"
}
@InProceedings{We:Footprints,
Author="A.~Wexelblat and P.~Maes",
Title="Footprints: History-rich Web browsing",
BookTitle="Proceedings of Conference Computer-Assisted Information
Retrieval {(RIAO)}",
Year=1997, Pages=75 # "--" # 84,
Annote="Citation from Perkowitz and Etzioni~\cite{Pe:TAWS} --- NOT READ
YET",
SeeAlso="Pausch and Detmer's Node Popularity as a Hypertext Browsing
Aid~\cite{Pa:pop}"
}
@Article{Pe:TAWS,
Author="Mike Perkowitz and Oren Etziono",
Title="Towards adaptive Web sites: Conceptual framework and case study",
Journal="Artificial Intelligence", Year=2000,
Volume=118, Pages=245 # "--" # 275,
SeeAlso="\cite{Pa:pop,We:Footprints}",
Annote="Intro to cluster mining. Their experimental results however are
meaningless and their assumptions highly questionable. One of the
file copies has notes in many of the margins.",
Keyword="\K{Cluster}"
}
@Article{Ba:SGML,
Author="David Barron",
Title="Why use {SGML}?",
Journal=EP-odd, Volume=2, Number=1, Pages=3#"--"#24,
Month=apr, Year=1989,
Keyword="\K{SGML} $\bullet$ \K{ODA} $\bullet$ \K{ODIF} $\bullet$
\K{markup}"
}
@Article{Dr:l2h,
Author="Nikos Drakos",
Title="From Text to Hypertext: A Post-hoc Rationalisation of
{LaTeX2HTML}",
Journal=isdn, Volume=27, Year=1994, Pages=215#"--"#224,
Annote="Converting hierarchical and structured text to HTML.",
Note="Presented at the {First World-Wide Web Conference}",
Keyword="\K{HT!Conversion}"
}
@Article{Ri:hptc,
Author="Ellen Riloff and Wendy Lehnert",
Title="Information Extraction as a Basis for High-Precision Text
Classification",
Journal=tois, Volume=12, Number=3, Month=jul, Year=1994,
Pages=296#"--"#333,
Keyword="\K{Categorization} $\bullet$ \K{Concept Identification}"
}
@InProceedings{Blu:SIGIR95,
Author="James Blustein and Robert~E. Webber",
Title="Using {LSI} to Evaluate the Quality of Hypertext Links",
BookTitle="{IR} and Automatic Construction of Hypermedia: A
Research Workshop",
Month="13 " # jul, Year=1995,
Pages=8 # "--" # 13,
Editor="Maristella Agosti and James Allan",
Organization="{ACM SIGIR}"
}
@Article{Blu:IPM97,
Author="James Blustein and Robert E. Webber and Jean
Tague-Sutcliffe",
Title="Methods for Evaluating the Quality of Hypertext Links",
Journal=ipm, Year=1997,
Volume=33, Number=2, Pages=255 # "--" # 271,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0306-4573(96)00066-0",
Annote="Abstract: `We present two methods for evaluating automatically
generated hypertext links. The first method is based on
correlations between shortest paths in the hypertext structure
and a semantic similarity measure. Experimental results with the
first method show the degree to which the hypertext conversion
process approximates semantic similarity. The semantic measure
is in turn only an approximation of a user's internal model of
the corpus. Therefore we propose a second evaluation method
based on measuring user's performance using hypertext. Finally,
we discuss the advantages and disadvantages of computer versus
human evaluation, respectively.'",
SeeAlso="References in last paragraph before conclusion in Chapter~4 of
Hypertext in Context~\cite{McK:NTCIS}"
}
@InProceedings{Blu:CAIS97,
Author="James Blustein",
Title="A Design for the Construction and Evaluation of an
Automatic Hypertext Generator",
BookTitle="Communication and Information In Context: Society,
Technology, and the Professions [Proceedings of the 25th
Annual Conference/Travaux du $\mathrm 25^{e}$ congr{\`{e}}s
annuel Canadian Association for Information Science
(CAIS)/Association Canadienne des Sciences de L'information
(ACSI)]",
Editor="Bernd Frohmann",
Pages=309#"--"#320,
Month="8--10 " # jun, Year=1997,
Address="St.~John's, Newfoundland"
}
@InProceedings{Blu:CHI98,
Author="James Blustein",
Title="Evaluating Automatically Generated Hypertext Versions
of Scholarly Articles",
BookTitle="Hyped-Media to Hyper-Media: Toward Theoretical
Foundations of Design, Use and Evaluation",
Editor="N. Hari Narayanan",
Month="19--20 " # apr, Year=1998,
Organization="{ACM} {SIGCHI}",
Note="Presented at a conference workshop",
URL="http://www.csd.uwo.ca/%7ejamie/CHI98/CHI.html"
}
@InProceedings{Bl:PGWplain
,Author = "James Blustein and Mona Noor"
,Title = "Personal glossaries on the {WWW}: an exploratory study"
,BookTitle = "{DocEng} '04: Proceedings of the 2004 {ACM} symposium on
Document engineering"
,Year = 2004
,ISBN = "1-58113-938-1"
,Pages = 54#"--"#56
,Location = "Milwaukee, {WI}"
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1030397.1030409"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
}
@InProceedings{Bl:PGWht
,Author = "James Blustein and Mona Noor"
,Title = "Personal glossaries on the {WWW}: an exploratory study
(Hypertext)"
,BookTitle = "{DocEng} '04: Proceedings of the 2004 {ACM} symposium on
Document engineering"
,Year = 2004
,ISBN = "1-58113-938-1"
,Pages = 54#"--"#56
,Location = "Milwaukee, {WI}"
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1030397.1030409"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
}
@InProceedings{Li:HSI08
,Author = "Marek Lipczak and James Blustein and Evangelos Milios"
,Title = "Natural Search Pointers--a query formulation method
for structured information search"
,BookTitle = "{HSI} '08: Proceedings of the Conference on Human
System Interaction"
,Location = "Krakow, Poland" ,Year = 2008 ,Pages = 215#"--"#220
,Publisher = "{IEEE} Computer Society" ,ISBN = "1-4244-1543-8"
,Keyword="\K{information search} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW!Search}"
}
@InProceedings{Blu:HT2K,
Author="James Blustein",
Title="Automatically Generated Hypertext Versions of Scholarly Articles
and Their Evaluation",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the Eleventh {ACM} Conference on Hypertext
and Hypermedia", CROSSREF="HT2K",
Pages=201 # "--" # 210,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/336296.336364"
}
@InProceedings{Th:SIGIR95,
Author="Paul Thistlewaite",
Title="Automatic Construction of Open Webs Using Derived Link
Patterns",
BookTitle="{IR} and Automatic Construction of Hypermedia: A
Research Workshop",
Month=13 # "~" # jul, Year=1995,
Editor="Maristella Agosti and James Allan",
Organization="{ACM SIGIR}",
Keyword="\K{Project!Pastime} $\bullet$ \K{Authoring/Conversion}"
}
@Article{Ma:Parse,
Author="Jean M. Mandler and Nancy S. Johnson",
Title="Remembrance of Things parsed: Story Structure and Recall",
Journal="Cognitive Psychology", Volume=9, Pages=111#"--"#151,
Year=1977,
SeeAlso="Dillon's models of readers of journals\cite{Di:RMTS}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych}"
}
@Article{Mc:HpathFall,
Title="The {``}Homeopathic Fallacy{''} in Learning from Hypertext",
Author="Jean McKendree and Will Reader and Nick Hammon",
Journal="{interactions}",
Volume="{ii}", Number=3, Month=jul, Year=1995,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/208666.208687",
SeeAlso="Charney~\cite[pp.\,242--243, 261]{Ch:EoH}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych}"
}
@Article{Po:CogWalk,
Title="Cognitive Walkthroughs: A Method for Theory-based Evaluation
of User Interfaces",
Author="Peter G. Polson and Clayton Lewis and John Rieman and
Cathleen Wharton",
Journal=IJMMS, Volume=36, Year=1992, Pages=741#"--"#773,
Keyword="\K{Evaluation!Cognitive walkthrough}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Usability Evaluation with CogWalks~\cite{Ri:CWTut95},
\item chapter in Lewis and Rieman's book~\cite{Le:TCUID},
\item part of Invisible Computer~\cite[pp.\,193--195]{No:IC},
\item and especially A Practioner's Guide~\cite{Wh:CWPG}
\end{itemize}"
}
@InProceedings{Ri:CWTut95,
Title="Usability Evaluation with the Cognitive Walkthrough",
Author="John Rieman and Marita Franzke and David Redmiles",
BookTitle="{CHI} '95 Mosaic of Creativity",
Pages=387 # "--" # 388,
Month=7 # "--" # 11 # "~" # may, Year=1995,
Keyword="\K{Evaluation!Cognitive walkthrough}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Po:CogWalk,Wh:CWPG}"
}
@InCollection{Wh:CWPG,
Title="The Cognitive Walkthrough Method: A Practitioner's Guide",
Author="Cathleen Wharton and John Rieman and Clayton Lewis and Peter
Polson",
Pages="105--140, 385--400",
BookTitle="Usability Inspection Methods",
Editor="Jakob Nielsen and Robert L. Mack",
Publisher="John Wiley \& Sons", Year=1994,
CallNo="QA76.9.U83N55 1994", ISBN="0-471-01877-5",
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation!Cognitive walkthrough}"
}
@InProceedings{Hu:CGW3
,Author = "Marilyn Hughes Blackmon and Peter G. Polson and Muneo
Kitajima and Clayton Lewis"
,Title = "Cognitive walkthrough for the Web"
,BookTitle = "{CHI} '02: Proceedings of the {SIGCHI} conference on Human
factors in computing systems"
,Year = 2002
,ISBN = "1-58113-453-3"
,Pages = 463#"--"#470
,Location = "Minneapolis, {MI}"
,DOI = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/503376.503459"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
,Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation!Cognitive walkthrough}"
}
@InProceedings{Hu:TAPWNP
,Author = "Marilyn Hughes Blackmon and Muneo Kitajima and Peter
G. Polson"
,Title = "Tool for accurately predicting website navigation problems
non-problems, problem severity, and effectiveness of repairs"
,BookTitle = "{CHI} '05: Proceedings of the {SIGCHI} conference on
Human factors in computing systems"
,Year = 2005
,ISBN = "1-58113-998-5"
,Pages = 31#"--"#40
,Location = "Portland, {OR}"
,DOI = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1054972.1054978"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Aaddress = "New York, {NY}"
,Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation!Cognitive walkthrough}"
}
@Article{Mi:WN,
Title="{WordNet}: A Lexical Database for {English}",
Author="George A. Miller",
Journal=cacm, Month=nov, Year=1995, Volume=38, Number=11,
Pages=39#"--"#41,
SeeAlso="Lingua::Wordnet module for perl~\cite{Br:WN}",
Keyword="\K{System!WordNet}"
}
@Article{Mi:BIUIS,
Note="Reprint of 1977 article, code: ijhc.1977.0305",
Title="Behavioral Issues in the use of interactive systems",
Author="Lance A. Miller and Thomas, Jr., John C.",
Journal=IJHCS, Year=1999, Volume=51, Pages=169 # "--" # 196,
Keyword="\K{Classic}"
}
@Article{Br:WN,
Title="{Lingua::Wordnet}",
Author="Dan Brian",
Journal="The Perl Journal", Volume=5, Number=2, Issue=18,
Month="{Summer}", Year=2000, Pages=40 # "--" # 48,
SeeAlso="Wordnet in CACM~\cite{Mi:WN}",
Keyword="\K{System!WordNet}"
}
@InProceedings{Wr:CogPros,
Title="Cognitive Overheads and Prostheses: Some Issues in Evaluating
Hypertexts",
Author="Patricia Wright",
BookTitle=HT91, CROSSREF="HT91", Pages=1#"--"#12,
SeeAlso="\cite{Wr:jump} for more about Black et al.'s experiment with
glossaries/dictionaries",
Annote="HT'91 opening keynote",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/122974.122975",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Classic!perhaps?}"
}
@Article{Bl:CODI,
Author="A. Black and P. Wright and D. Black and K. Norman",
Title="Consulting on-line dictionary information while reading",
Journal="Hypermedia",
Volume=4, Number=3, Year=1992,
Note="Official abstract at
\url{http://www.comp.glam.ac.uk/~NRHM/h-volume4/ha-1992-7.htm}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Wr:jump} and \cite{Wr:CogPros}"
}
@Article{Wr:CCLA,
Title="Colour cues as location aids in lengthy texts on screen and
paper",
Author="P.~Wright and A.~Lickorish",
Journal="Behaviour and Information Technology",
Volume=7, Number=1, Pages=11#"--"#30, Year=1988,
SeeAlso="Facilitating navigation in information spaces: Road-signs on the
{World Wide Web} by Campbell and Maglio \cite{Ca:FNIS}",
Keyword="\K{HCI!colour}"
}
@Article{Br:AaU
,Title="Aesthetics and Usability: A Look at Color and Balance"
,Author="Laurie Brady and Christine Phillips"
,Journal="Usability News" ,Volume="5.1" ,Year=2003
,URL="http://psychology.wichita.edu/surl/usabilitynews/51/aesthetics.htm"
,SeeAlso="'What makes a website popular' \cite{Ka:WMWP} and
and 'The role of context in perception of the aesthetics of web
pages over time' \cite{vSc:RCPA}"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!colour} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!website reputation / value assessment}"
}
@InCollection{Wr:EC2NS,
Title="An empirical comparison of two navigation systems for two
hypertexts",
Author="Patricia Wright and Ann Lickorish",
Chapter=9, Pages=84#"--"#93, CROSSREF="McAl/Green",
}
@Article{We:DB,
Title="The Design of a Dynamic Book For Information Search",
Author="Stephen A. Weyer",
Journal=ijmms, Year=1982, Volume=17, Pages=87#"--"#107
}
@Article{Ni:PvP,
Journal=cacm, Volume=37, Number=4, Pages=66#"--"#75,
Month=apr, Year=1994,
Title="Measuring Usability: Preference vs. Performance",
Author="Jakob Nielsen and Jonathan Levy",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/175276.175282"
}
@InCollection{Al:CRIS91,
Title="Cognitive Research in Information Science: Implications for Design",
Author="Bryce L. Allen",
BookTitle=ARIST, Volume=26, Year=1991,
Pages=3#"--"#37,
Editor="Martha E. Williams",
Organization=asis,
Publisher="Learned Information, Inc.",
Keyword="\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych} $\bullet$
\K{Information Retrieval}"
}
@InProceedings{Br:IFRIS,
Author="Bryce Allen",
Title="Information Space Representation in Interactive Systems:
Relationship to Spatial Abilities",
BookTitle="Digital Libraries 98", Address="Pittsburgh, {PA}",
Editor="Ian Witten and Rob Akscyn and Shipman, {III}, Frank M.",
Year=1998, Month="23--26~" # jun,
Pages=1 # "--" # 10,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/276675.276676",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item
multiple-window/frame, lists vs. spatial organization for IR,
possibly useful for information visualization. Users with lower
levels of spatial ability benefitted most from the design features
that made use of 2D information representation. Mismatch between
the abilities of users and the design features implemented can
deteriorate performance. Not clear why or if these results carry
over to other interfaces.
{}
\item
Background: mental models and learning/information encoding
references
{}
\item
Background: abilities/qualities such as: spatial scanning (to orient
self and locate objects in space), perceptual speed (related to
selection of scanning strategies), and field independence influence
performance in IR (p.\,3) (See Charney~\cite[pp.\,252, 262]{Ch:EoH}
for more about field (in-)dependence.)
{}
\item
`The results show that design features can act to deteriorate
performance if there is not a good match between the design features
and abilities of users'~(p.\,7)
{}
\item
`Users with lower levels of spatial abilities benefitted most from
the design features that made use of two-dimensional information
representation.\ldots{}A comparison of the results for interactions
of design features with cognitive abilities and with task leads to
the conclusion that personal characteristics provide a stronger
basis for the design of usable systems than tasks.'~(p.\,9)
\begin{itemize}
\item[]
Perhaps this is related to Dillon \& Watson in IJHCS (1996)
45:619--637~\cite{Di:UAinHCI}
\end{itemize}
{}
\item
Paivo's extensive body of research `demonstrates that the ability to
encode information presented conceptuallly as a spatial
representation can facilitate learning and memory. \ldots Dual
encoding is facilitated by an isomorphism between the dimensions of
conceptual and representations.' (p.\,2)
{}
\item Method:
Used Ekstrom test set, tested Spatial Scanning and Perceptual
Scanning, high-low categorization by median split (pp.\,3, 6)
{}
\item
`There was a significant three-way interaction between task, display
type, and perceptual speed ($F(1,64)=4.94, p<.03$) in predicting the
proportion of records printed by users.' (p.\,8)
{}
\item From Discussion (p.\,9):
`It was expected that certain cognitive abilities would be
associated with processing of spatial representations of
information. The findings supported this idea, but in an unexpected
manner. One might have expected that users with higher levels of
spatial abilities would have been most able to make use of spatial
representations of information, and so derive the most benefit from
these representations. In fact the opposite occurred. Users with
lower levels of spatial abilities benefitted most from the design
features that made use of two-dimensional information
representation.
{}
The results presented in Table~4 provide one example of this effect
\begin{itemize}
\item Table~4 (p.\,7):\\
{}
\begin{tabular}{r|rr}
& \multicolumn{2}{c}{\textbf{Spat. Scan.}}\\
\textbf{Word Map} & Low & High\\\hline
No & $.15$ & $.22$\\
Yes & $.29$ & $.24$\\
\hline\hline
\multicolumn{3}{l}{$F(1,1)=1495.87, p<.02$}\\
\multicolumn{3}{l}{}\\
\end{tabular}
\end{itemize}
{}
It seems likely that users with higher levels of spatial scanning
are able to visualize information spaces on their own, without
system-provided aids. \ldots a mismatch between the abilities of
users and the design features implemented can deteriorate
performance.'
\end{itemize}",
SeeAlso="\begin{description}
\item[Journal version]~\cite{Al:IDCUCD}
\item[field (in-)dependence]
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item B. Allen in DL98 \cite{Br:IFRIS}
and JASIS \cite{Al:IDCUCD}
\item Charney \cite[pp.\,252, 262]{Ch:EoH}
\item Dillon \& Watson in IJHCS v.45
\cite[p.\,627]{Di:UAinHCI}
\item Dillon in JASIS 51(6) \cite{Di:SSHUDSIS}
\item N. Ford's {\itshape Cognitive Styles and Virtual
Environments} also in JASIS 51(6) \cite{Fo:CSVE}
\item Jennings et al. in CogErg91 \cite{Je:ASDBI}
\end{itemize} \end{description}",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Tr:SMD,
Title="Spatial Memory and Design: A Conceptual Approach to the Creation
of Navigable Space in Multimedia Design",
Author="Jean Trumbo",
Journal=int, Volume="{V}", Number=4, Pages=26 # "--" # 34,
Month=jul # "--" # aug, Year=1998,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/278465.278470",
Annote="recall requires that recognized elements be moved to LTM,
memory \& attention, new media leads to new forms of literacy",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@Article{Di:HFE-J,
Author="Andrew Dillon and John Richardson and Cliff McKnight",
Title="Human Factors of Journal Usage and Design of Electronic Texts",
Journal="Interacting with Computers",
Volume=1, Number=2, Pages=183#"--"#189, Year=1989,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0953-5438(89)90025-8",
From="ILL 20 Dec 1995",
SeeAlso="{NATO} Conference~\cite{Jo:DHL}",
Keyword="\K{e-pubs} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych} "
}
@Article{McD:Diso,
Author="Sharon McDonald and Rosemary J. Stevenson",
Title="Disorientation in hypertext: the effects of three text
structures on navigation performance",
Journal="Applied Ergonomics", Year=1996,
Volume=27, Number=1, Pages=61#"--"#68,
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item McKnight, Dillon, and Richardson (1990)~\cite{McK:LvsH} for a
similar experiment,
\item Chen \& Rada (1996)~\cite{Ch:Meta} for a different summary of
hypertext evaluation experiments, and
\item Piolat et al.~\cite{Pi:ESPTRV}
\end{itemize}",
Annote="12 expert users each tried one of 2 types of hypertext or a
linear doc presented with a computer. They answered questions. All
answered correctly but HT users took longer, and had more trouble.
Differences between the types of document were significant.",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Testing} $\bullet$ \K{Usability}
$\bullet$ \K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych} $\bullet$
\K{Navigation}",
}
@Article{McD:ETSnPK,
Author="Sharon McDonald and Rosemary J. Stevenson",
Title="Effects of Text Structure and Prior Knowledge of the
Learner on Navigation in Hypertext",
Journal="Human Factors", Volume=40, Number=1, Month=mar, Year=1998,
Pages=18 # "--" # 27,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Expertise}"
}
@Article{Pi:ESPTRV,
Author="Annie Piolat and Jean-Yves Roussey and Oliveier Thunin",
Title="Effects of screen presentation on text reading and revising",
Journal=ijhcs, Year=1997, Volume=47, Pages=565#"--"#589,
SeeAlso="McDonald and Stevenson~\cite{McD:Diso}",
Annote="Abstract: `Two studies using the methods of experimental
psychology assessed the effects of two types of text presentation
(page-by-page vs. scrolling) on participants' performance while
reading and revising texts. Greater facilitative effects of the
page-by-page presentation were observed in both tasks. The
participants reading task performance indicated that they built a
better mental representation of the text as a whole and were better at
locating relevant information and remembering the main ideas. Their
revising task performance indicated a larger number of global
corrections (which are most difficult to make).' Texts were in
French.",
Keyword="\K{Reading}"
}
@Article{Ch:Meta,
Author="Chaomei Chen and Roy Rada",
Title="Interacting With Hypertext: A Meta-Analysis of Experimental
Studies",
Journal="Human-Computer Interaction", Year=1996,
Volume=11, Number=2, Pages=125#"--"#156,
URL={http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15327051hci1102_2},
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item McDonald and Stevenson (1996)~\cite{McD:Diso} for a
different summary of hypertext evaluation experiments;
\item Dillon and Gabbard~\cite{Di:EdHTRev} for some criticism
of the methodology and a survey of HT for learning;
\item Chen and Czerwinski~\cite{Ch:Spat} for more references
to spatial ability being important;
\item Mahmood et al. for a meta-analysis of IT end-user
satisfaction~\cite{Ma:ITSatis}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability} $\bullet$
\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{individual differences}",
Annote="The authors synthesised the results of studies of hypertext
from 20 published reports to perform an analysis of results from 23
experiments. They found three main factors in the evaluation of
hypertext: user type, task type, tools provided by hypertext system.
They evaluated the hypertext according to efficiency (speed) and
effectiveness (performance on tasks set by experimenters)."
}
@Article{Ch:Spat,
Author="Chaomei Chen and Mary Czerwinski",
Title="Spatial Ability and Visual Navigation: An Empirical Study",
Journal=NRHM, Volume=3, Year=1997, Pages=67 # "--" # 89,
ISSN="1361-4568",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Chen \& Rada's meta-analysis~\cite{Ch:Meta} for other factors
that matter.
\item Chen \& Carr also had a paper at HT'99 about a visualization of
ACM HT conference papers~\cite{Ch:TLH}.
\end{itemize}",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item nice review of spatial studies (pp.\,69--70)
\item `No strong correlation was found with consistency between
spatial ability and task performance measures as predicted.'
(p.\,87)
\item `\ldots{} the mixed showing of spatial correlates with user
behavior in hypermedia environments, as highlighted by Chen and
Czerwinski (1997).'~\cite[p.\,526]{Di:SSHUDSIS}
\item Abstract: `In this paper, we describe an empirical study of
individuals' spatial navigation strategies and a number of
performance and preference measures with regard to the design of
a novel 3D visualisation. The underlying semantic space of the
user interface consists of a collection of papers from the three
most recent ACM SIGCHI conference proceedings, visualised as a
virtual reality network. This network was automatically
constructed based on semantic similarities derived from latent
semantic analysis. We studied the search strategies and general
preferences of eleven subjects who used this system to find
papers on various topics. The study has led to a number of
interesting findings, which should be valuable for designers and
evaluators of 3D user interfaces. The results highlight the
importance of structural elements in the design of a
semantically based user interface, because search strategies of
users relied heavily on these mechanisms in the design. The
results of this study also demonstrate that we are able to
characterise and learn from users' search strategies in a visual
environment strongly shaped by semantic relationships of the
information content. Implications for user interface design
based on users' psychological models of a semantic space are
described.'
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@Article{MeSc:HSC,
Title="Human Spatial Cognition: Its Relevance to the Design and Use of
Spatial Information Systems",
Author="David Medyckyj-Scott",
Journal="Geoforum", Year=1992, Volume=23, Number=2,
Pages=215 # "--" # 226,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0016-7185(92)90018-Y",
Keyword="\K{GIS} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Di:EdHTRev,
Author="Andrew Dillon and Ralph Gabbard",
Title="Hypermedia as an Educational Technology: A Review of the
Quantitative Research Literature on Learner Comprehension, Control
and Style",
Journal="Review of Educational Research",
Year=1998, Month="{Fall}",
Volume=68, Number=3, Pages=322 # "--" # 349,
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Review}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Chen \& Rada's meta-analysis~\cite{Ch:Meta},
\item Individual Diffs in IJHCS~\cite{Di:UAinHCI},
\item Quentin-Baxter's survey~\cite{QB:QEDPHL}
\item Dee-Lucas \& Larkin's Hypertext Segmentation and Goal
Compatibility~\cite{DeLu:HTSGC}
\end{itemize}",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item reviewed empirical lit about use of HT and MM in education
\item found that much of the lit were not up to `minimally acceptable
scientific criteria'. Examined 30 articles from 1990--1996.
\item Comprehension
\begin{itemize}
\item Overall no sig. diff. however some authors have taken this
to mean that HT is at least as good as paper and therefore
worthy of further R\&D efforts
\end{itemize}
\item pp.\,8--11: found sugestion of strong task dependency on the
successful exploitation of HT/MM. Paper may be beter for
some things but HT/HM/MM for others.
\item p.\,13: learner control
\item pp.\,16--7 (337--8): field independant and field independant
learners \emph{but} no predictive or explanatory power
\item Some features can help (e.g. cueing) poorer performing students
\item HT ultimately viewed as a method of information delivery
\item Comments about Chen \& Rada (1996)~\cite{Ch:Meta} three times
\item Frey \& Simonson (1993):
\begin{itemize}
\item measurement of learning styles
\item individual differences
\end{itemize}
\item difficulty of measuring comprehension
\item task-dependency
\item user control of HT --- using HT to create own structure
\end{itemize}"
}
@Article{Di:UAinHCI,
Author="Andrew Dillon and Charles Watson",
Title="User analysis in {HCI}---the historical lessons from individual
differences research",
Journal=ijhcs, Year=1996, Volume=45, Number=6, Pages=619 # "--" # 637,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/ijhc.1996.0071",
SeeAlso="\begin{description}
\item[general]
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item The Matters That Matter by Nielsen~\cite{Ni:Usab}
\end{itemize}
\item[field (in-)dependence]
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item B. Allen in DL98 \cite[p.\,9]{Br:IFRIS}
and JASIS \cite{Al:IDCUCD}
\item Charney \cite[pp.\,252, 262]{Ch:EoH}
\item Dillon \& Watson in IJHCS v.45
\cite[p.\,627]{Di:UAinHCI}
\item Dillon in JASIS 51(6) \cite{Di:SSHUDSIS}
\item N. Ford's {\itshape Cognitive Styles and Virtual
Environments} also in JASIS 51(6) \cite{Fo:CSVE}
\item Jennings et al. in CogErg91 \cite{Je:ASDBI}
\end{itemize}
\end{description}",
Annote="Some notes:
\begin{description}
\item[p.\,625]
`[F]or most components of info processing that have been subjected
to differential investigations, individual differences have been
observed.'
{}
\item[p.\,626]
`{}``Cognitive style'' refers to relatively stable patterns of
information processing that are displayed by an individual. In a
sense it can be seen as the cognitive-psychological. or more
accurately, information-processing equivalent of personality.'
{}
\item[p.\,627] comment about uselessness of field
dependence/independence distinctions
{}
\item[pp.631--3] Implications section. `What is interesting from
both these studies is the explicit mapping of individual
differences to interface characteristics. Both show that even
though there are differences amongst users that predict
performance with interactive systems, appropriate design of the
interface and/or training can reduce these differences.' (p.\,633)
\end{description}",
Keyword="\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{HCI} $\bullet$
\K{individual differences}"
}
@Article{Di:EPSI,
Author="Andrew Dillon and Dille Schaap",
Title="Expertise and the perception of shape in information",
Journal=JASIS, Volume=47, Number=10, Pages=786#"--"#788,
Month=oct, Year=1996,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-4571(199610)47:10<786::AID-ASI7>3.0.CO;2-Z",
Annote="Also available from \url{http://www3.interscience.wiley.com.ezproxy.library.dal.ca/cgi-bin/abstract/57664/ABSTRACT}",
SeeAlso="
\begin{itemize}
\item followed-up by Spatial Semantics~\cite{Di:SSHUDSIS} (also about
shape of information)
\item sounds like Bonnie Meyer's (1984) experiment with text
expectations~\cite[pp.\,246--247]{Ch:EoH}
\item follows-up `Readers' models of text structures: the case of
academic articles'~\cite{Di:RMTS} with non-experts
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{Expertise} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation} $\bullet$ \K{Info Shape}"
}
@Article{QB:QEDPHL,
Author="Megan Quentin-Baxter",
Title="Quantitative Evidence For Differences Between Learners Making Use
Of Passive Hypermedia Learning Environments",
Journal="{ACM} Computing Surveys",
Year=1999, Month=dec,
Volume=31, Number="4es",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Review}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Dillon \& Gabbard's survey~\cite{Di:EdHTRev},
\item Chen\&Rada's meta-analysis~\cite{Ch:Meta},
\item Individual Diffs in IJHCS~\cite{Di:UAinHCI}
\end{itemize}",
URL="http://www.cs.brown.edu/memex/ACM_HypertextTestbed/papers/52.html",
Note="Part of an electronic symposium~\cite{CS:Dec99}"
}
@Article{We:CRNLT,
Author="Michael J. Wenger and David G. Payne",
Title="Comprehension and retention of nonlinear text:
Considerations of working memory and material-appropriate
processing",
Journal="American Journal of Psychology",
Volume=109, Number=1, Pages=93#"--"#130, month="Spring", Year=1996,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@Article{Od:Sit,
Author="Robert N. Oddy and Elizabeth DuRoss Liddy and Bhaskaran
Balakrishnan and Ann Bishop and Joseph Elewononi and Eileen Martin",
Title="Towards the Use of Situational Information in Information
Retrieval",
Journal=jdoc, Volume=48, Number=2, Month=jun, Year=1992,
Pages=123#"--"#171
}
@Article{Ki:InitMent,
Author="David~E. Kieras",
Title="Initial Mention As a Signal To Thematic Content in Technical
Passages",
Journal="Memory \& Cognition", Year=1980, Volume=8, Number=4,
Pages=345#"--"#353,
Annote="Brief survey of some literature about conventional use of
`topic sentences' at the beginning of paragraphs (pp.\,345--346,
351~-- 352). Studies found, however, that initial mention of topic
is not essential for a reader to determine the topic of a passage.
Used articles from {\it Scientific American} for experiments."
}
@Article{Ro:Narrow,
Author="Mike Rose",
Title="Narrowing the Mind and Page: Remedial Writers and Cognitive
Reductionism",
Journal="College Composition and Communication", Volume=39, Number=3,
Month=oct, Year=1988, Pages=267#"--"#302,
Annote="Cited by Charney~\cite{Ch:EoH}"
}
@InProceedings{Ni:MMU,
Author="Jakob Nielsen and Thomas~K. Landauer",
Title="A Mathematical Model of the Finding of Usability Problems",
Pages=206#"--"#213,
BookTitle="Proceedings of {INTERCHI} 1993",
Editor="Stacey Ashlund and Kevin Mullet and Austin Henderson and
Erik Hollnagel and Ted White",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley", Month="24~-- 29 " # apr, Year=1993,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/169059.169166",
Keyword="\K{heuristic}",
SeeAlso="Nielsen's Estimating the number of Ss needed for a thinking
aloud test~\cite{Ni:NumUsers} and Spool and Shroeder's re-examination
of this finding~\cite{Sp:NumSs}"
}
@Article{Ni:NumUsers,
Author="Jakob Nielsen",
Title="Estimating the Number of Subjects Needed for a Thinking
Aloud Test",
Journal=ijhcs, Volume=41, Year=1994, Pages=385 # "--" # 397,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/ijhc.1994.1065",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Nielsen and Landauer's math. model for finding usability
problems~\cite{Ni:MMU}
\item Spool and Schroeder's Testing Web Sites: Five Users Is Nowhere
Near Enough~\cite{Sp:NumSs}\end{itemize}"
}
@Unpublished{Ra:EvalSemHM,
Author="Ajaz~R. Rana and Eduardo Morales",
Institution="Institute for Integrated Systems Research, New Jersey
Institute of Technology",
Title="Evaluation of Semantic Hypermedia Links for Reading of
Scholarly Writing",
Year=1996,
Note="Distributed at poster session of {\it Hypertext '96} conference"
}
@UnPublished{Gr:LexCh,
Author="Stephen~J. Green",
Title="Using Lexical Chains to Build Hypertext Links in Newspaper
Articles",
Note="Submitted to the {AAAI-96 Workshop on Internet-based Information
Systems}. Distributed at poster session of {\it Hypertext '96}
conference~\cite{HT96}",
Month="14~" # mar, Year=1996
}
@Article{Ya:ValidMet,
Author="Shoji Yamada and Jung-Kook Hong and Shigeharu Sugita",
Title="Development and Evaluation of Hypermedia for Museum Education:
Validation of Metrics",
Journal=tochi, Volume=2, Number=4, Month=dec, Year=1995,
Pages=284#"--"#307,
SeeAlso="Botafogo et al.~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics}",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Metric} $\bullet$ \K{Usability}",
Note={See Corrigendum of formula for downward compactness in vol.~3,
no.~2, (Sept. 1996) p.\,285. \\
(The equation for $DC_p$ should be
\begin{eqnarray*}
DC_p & = & \frac{(n - 1)^3}{n(n - 1) - \sum_i Dp_i},\\
Dp_i & = & \mbox{Depth from root to node $i$.}
\end{eqnarray*})},
Annote="strong relationship between enjoyability and usability
(\S{}4.3.1, pp.\,302--303)"
}
@Article{Hi:PFOJ,
Author="Thomas~B. Hickey",
Title="Present and Future Capabilities of the Online Journal",
Journal="Library Trends", Volume=43, Number=4, Pages=528#"--"#543,
Month="{Spring}", Year=1995,
Keyword="\K{e-pubs}"
}
@Article{Bi:SJN,
Author="Ann Peterson Bishop",
Title="Scholarly Journals on the Net: A Reader's Assesment",
Journal="Library Trends", Volume=43, Number=4, Pages=544#"--"#570,
Month="{Spring}", Year=1995,
Keyword="\K{e-pubs}"
}
@Article{Ch:AGR,
Author="Tat-Seng Chua and Chui-Har Choo",
Title="Automatic generation and refinement of hypertext links",
Journal=NRHM, Year=1995,
Annote="Tries to rank nodes to create a tour based on user query.
Evaluation uses the same method as creation.",
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{Spreading activation}"
}
@Article{Sm:EACHT,
Author="Alan F. Smeaton and Patrick J. Morrissey",
Title="Experiments of the automatic construction of hypertext from texts",
Journal=NRHM, Year=1995,
SeeAlso="my MSc thesis~\cite{Bl:MSc}, Botafogo {\it et al.}'s metrics
paper~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics}",
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval}",
Annote="Based on Morrissey's MSc thesis. Break documents into chunks
of about the same size, link them based on IR similarity and limit
by dynamically computing compactness~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics}. Intended as
part of a semi-automated link making program."
}
@Article{Ch:T-BMCUH,
Author="Elizabeth Charnock and Roy Rada and Steve Stichler and Peter
Weygant",
Title="Task-based method for creating usable hypertext",
Journal="Interacting with computers", Volume=6, Number=3, Year=1994,
Pages=275#"--"#287,
Keyword="\K{Design} $\bullet$ \K{SGML/HyTime} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}",
Annote="Rule based (human) authoring methodology for creating
hypertext from a well-defined information set produced for online
reading. Concept of `gateways' (buttons to click) to make link scope
clear."
}
@Article{Le:REHT,
Author="Mark~R. Lehto and Wenil Zhu and Bryan Carpenter",
Title="The Relative Effectiveness of Hypertext and Text",
Journal="International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction",
Volume=7, Number=4, Pages=293#"--"#313, Year=1995,
Annote="Hypertext as a useful interface to an online indexed version
of a textbook.",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation}",
SeeAlso="Chen \& Rada~\cite{Ch:Meta} and \cite{My:HTorBook}"
}
@InCollection{Sa:AllanThesis,
Title="Automatic Analysis, Theme Generation, and Summarization of
Machine-Readable Texts",
Author="Gerard Salton and James Allan and Chris Buckley and Amit
Singhal",
Editor="Maristella Agosti and Alan~F. Smeaton",
BookTitle="Information retrieval and hypertext",
Publisher="Kluwer Academic", Year=1996,
Keyword="\K{System!SMART}"
}
@InProceedings{Al:AHLT,
Author="James Allan",
Title="Automatic Hypertext Link Typing",
BookTitle=HT96, CROSSREF="HT96",
Pages=42#"--"#52,
Keyword="\K{System!SMART}",
SeeAlso="James's thesis~\cite{Sa:AllanThesis}"
}
@InProceedings{Sa:HT96,
Author="Gerald Salton and Amit Singhal and Chris Buckley and Mandar
Mitra",
Note="The first author was misidentified in the proceedings as Gerard
Salton.",
Title="Automatic Text Decomposition Using Text Segments and Text
Themes",
BookTitle=HT96, CROSSREF="HT96",
Pages=53#"--"#65,
Keyword="\K{System!SMART}"
}
@InProceedings{Si:Pivot,
Author="Amit Singhal and Chris Buckley and Mandar Mitra",
Title="Pivoted Document Length Normalization",
Pages=21#"--"#29,
BookTitle="Proceedings of the 19th Annual International ACM SIGIR
Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval",
Editor="Hans-Peter Frei and Donna Harman and Peter Sch{\"a}uble
and Ross Wilkinson",
Month="18--22 " # aug, Year=1996, ISBN="0-89791-792-8"
}
@InCollection{Gr:SoT,
Author="Roger A. Grice",
Title="Online Information: What Do People Want? What Do People
Need?",
BookTitle=SofT, CROSSREF="Society"
}
@InCollection{Ca:HTIITR,
Author="Patricia Ann Carlson",
Title="Hypertext and Intelligent Interfaces for Text Retrieval",
BookTitle=SofT, CROSSREF="Society",
Chapter=4, Pages=59 # "--" # 76,
}
@InCollection{Ir:SCHM,
Author="Peggy M. Irish and Randall H. Trigg",
Title="Supporting Collaboration in Hypermedia: Issues and Experiences",
BookTitle=SofT, CROSSREF="Society",
}
@InCollection{Me:ML,
Author="Norman Meyrowitz",
Title="The Missing Link: Why We're All Doing Hypertext Wrong",
BookTitle=SofT, CROSSREF="Society"
}
@InCollection{Sh:RAEMHT,
Author="Ben Shneiderman",
Title="Reflections on Authoring, Editing, and Managing Hypertext",
Chapter=8, Pages=115#"--"#131,
BookTitle=SofT, CROSSREF="Society"
}
@InCollection{Br:FDB2HT,
Author="R.~John Brockmann and William Horton and Kevin Brock",
Title="From Database to Hypertext via Electronic Publishing: An
Information Odyssey",
Chapter=11, Pages=162 # "--" # 205,
BookTitle=SofT, CROSSREF="Society",
SeeAlso="Ordering the Information Graph by Parunak~\cite{Pa:Order}
in HT/HM Handbook ed. by Berk and Devlin (for different HT link
structures). Fig.\,16 on p.\,183 is a famous diagram.",
Keyword="\K{link structures}"
}
@InCollection{Ch:EoH,
Author="Davida Charney",
Title="The Effect of Hypertext on Processes of Reading and Writing",
Chapter=10, Pages=238#"--"#263,
BookTitle="Literacy and Computers: The Complications of Teaching and
Learning with Technology",
Publisher="The Modern Language Association of America", Year=1994,
Address="New York, {NY}",
Editor="Cynthia L. Selfe and Susan Hilligoss",
Annote="Charney presents an excellent synthesis of psychological
and linguistic theory and experimentation to show what we know about
the effects of hypertext on readers, and how writers might adapt
their writing to new forms. She also points out where the research
is lacking or contradictory.",
URL="http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/%7Echarney/homepage/Articles/Charney_hypertext.pdf",
Keyword="\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{Reading} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Ha:learnHT,
Author="Nick Hammond",
Title="Learning with Hypertext: Problems, Principles and Prospects",
Chapter=4, Pages=51#"--"#69,
BookTitle=HTPsyP, CROSSREF="HT+Psych"
}
@InCollection{Wr:jump,
Author="Patricia Wright",
Title="To Jump Or Not To Jump: Strategy Selection While Reading
Electronic Texts",
Chapter=6,
BookTitle=HTPsyP, CROSSREF="HT+Psych",
SeeAlso="p.\,326 of Wolfe \& Neuwirth \cite{Wo:FMCFA} for more on form",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@InCollection{Wr:IL-NATO,
Author="Patricia Wright",
Title="Hypertexts as an Interface for Learners: Some Human Factors
Issues",
Chapter=10,
BookTitle="Designing Hypermedia for Learning",
Editor="David~H. Jonassen and Heinz Mandl",
Publisher="Springer-Verlag", Year=1990,
Series="{NATO} Advanced Science Institutes Series, {F}: Computer and
Systems Sciences, Vol.~67",
Organization="{NATO} Scientific Affairs Division",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Wh:MHSL-NATO,
Author="Peter Whalley",
Title="Models of Hypertext Structure and Learning",
Chapter=4,
BookTitle="Designing Hypermedia for Learning",
Editor="David H. Jonassen and Heinz Mandl",
Publisher="Springer-Verlag", Year=1990,
Series="{NATO} Advanced Science Institutes Series, {F}: Computer and
Systems Sciences, Vol.~67",
Organization="{NATO} Scientific Affairs Division"
}
@InCollection{Di:Sp,
Author="Andrew Dillon and Cliff McKnight and John Richardson",
Title="Space --- the Final Chapter Or Why Physical Representations
Are Not Semantic Intentions",
Chapter=8, Pages=169#"--"#191,
BookTitle=HTPsyP, CROSSREF="HT+Psych",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Jo:SemStUKS,
Title="Effects of Semantically Structured Hypertext Knowledge
Bases on Users' Knowledge Structures",
Author="David H. Jonassen",
Chapter=7, Pages=153#"--"#168,
BookTitle=HTPsyP, CROSSREF="HT+Psych",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Homeopathic Fallacy~\cite{Mc:HpathFall}
argues that the process is not the same as the result
\item Bryce Allen's DL98~\cite{Br:IFRIS}
experiment with a similar interface
\end{itemize}"
}
@InCollection{Wh:AltRhetHT,
Title="An Alternative Rhetoric for Hypertext",
Author="Peter Whalley",
Chapter=2, Pages=2#"--"#17,
BookTitle=HTPsyP, CROSSREF="HT+Psych",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Joyce:Selfish,
Author="Michael Joyce",
Title="Selfish Interaction Or Subversive Texts",
BookTitle="Hypertext/Hypermedia Handbook",
Editor="Emily Berk and Joseph Devlin",
Publisher="Intertext Publications",
Year=1991, Pages=79#"--"#92, Chapter=8
}
@InCollection{Pa:Order,
Author="H. {Van Dyke} Parunak",
Title="Ordering the Information Graph",
BookTitle="Hypertext/Hypermedia Handbook",
Editor="Emily Berk and Joseph Devlin",
Publisher="Intertext Publications", Address="New York, {NY}",
Year=1991, Pages=299#"--"#325, Chapter=20,
SeeAlso="Brockmann et al.~\cite{Br:FDB2HT} in Society of Text by
Barrett (for different ht link structures)",
Keyword="\K{link structures}"
}
@InCollection{Fo:SVD,
Author="George E. Forsythe and Michael A. Malcolm and Cleve B. Moler",
BookTitle="Computer Methods for Mathematical Computations",
Title="Least Squares and the Singular Value Decomposition",
Chapter=9, Pages=192#"--"#239,
Publisher="Prentice-Hall", Edition="first", Year=1977,
LCC="76-30819", CallNo="QA 297.F568", ISBN="0-13-165332-6",
Keyword="\K{LSI}"
}
@InCollection{McK:LvsH,
Author="Cliff McKnight and Andrew Dillon and John Richardson",
Title="A Comparison of Linear and Hypertext Formats in
Information Retrieval",
Pages=10#"--"#19,
BookTitle="Hypertext: State of the Art",
Year=1990,
Editor="Ray McAleese and Catherine Green",
Publisher="Intellect",
SeeAlso="McDonald and Stevenson (1996)~\cite{McD:Diso}"
}
@Article{Di:RMTS,
Author="Andrew Dillon",
Title="Readers' models of text structures: the case of
academic articles",
Journal=ijmms, Volume=35, Pages=913#"--"#925, Year=1991,
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item
We know that readers form a mental representation of a
paper document's structure that facilitates non-serial reading.
The same holds for text presented on a computer screen.
\item
Also, a cloze test does not measure hypertext comprehension.
(See also Ch.~4 of HT in Context~\cite{McK:NTCIS})
\end{itemize}",
SeeAlso="Dillon \& Schaap~\cite{Di:EPSI} for a follow-up with
non-experts",
Keyword="\K{Reading} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@Article{Di:RPS,
Author="Andrew Dillon",
Title="Reading from paper versus screens: a critical review of the
empirical literature",
Journal="Ergonomics", Volume=35, Number=10, Pages=1297#"--"#1326,
Year=1992,
Annote="Considers differences in terms of outcome and processes.
Concludes that single variable explanations are insufficent.",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item O'Hara \& Sellen in CHI97~\cite{OH:CRPOLD}
\item Muter in Oostendorp and de~Mul(1996)~\cite{Mu:IDORCT}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@InCollection{Mu:IDORCT,
Author="Paul Muter",
Title="Interface Design and Optimization of Reading of Continous Text",
BookTitle="Cognitive Aspects of Electronic Text Processing",
CROSSREF="Oo:CAETP",
URL="http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/~muter/pmuter1.htm",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item O'Hara \& Sellen in CHI97~\cite{OH:CRPOLD}
\item Dillon in Ergonomics 35(10)~\cite{Di:RPS}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@Article{Tr:AVPUID,
Author="David S. Travis",
Title="Applying visual psychophysics to user interface design",
Journal="Behaviour \& Information Technology", Volume=9, Number=5,
Pages=425 # "--" # 438,
Year=1990,
SeeAlso="Dillon's 1992 survey of reading from computer
screens~\cite{Di:RPS} and Travis's book~\cite{Tr:ECD}",
}
@InProceedings{OH:CRPOLD,
Author="Kenton O'Hara and Abigail Sellen",
Title="A Comparison of Reading Paper and On-Line Documents",
BookTitle=SIGCHI97, CROSSREF="CHI97",
Pages=335 # "--" # 342,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/258549.258787",
Publisher="{ACM} Press", Address="New York, {NY}",
Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{Reading} $\bullet$
\K{spatial ability}",
SeeAlso="O'Hara et al. in CHI'98~\cite{OH:SRULD}"
}
@InProceedings{OH:SRULD,
Author="Kenton O'Hara and Fiona Smith and William Newman and Abigail
Sellen",
Title="Student Readers' Use of Library Documents: Implications for
Library Technologies",
BookTitle=SIGCHI98, CROSSREF="CHI98",
Pages=233 # "--" # 240,
SeeAlso="O'Hara and Sellen in CHI'97~\cite{OH:CRPOLD}",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/274644.274678",
Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@InCollection{Jo:Sem,
Author="David H. Jonassen",
Title="Semantic Network Elicitation: Tools for Structuring Hypertext",
Pages=142#"--"#152,
BookTitle="Hypertext: State of the Art",
Year=1990,
Editor="Ray McAleese and Catherine Green",
Publisher="Intellect"
}
@InCollection{La:PopFall,
Title="Popular Fallacies About Hypertext", Chapter=3,
Author="George P. Landow",
BookTitle="Designing Hypermedia for Learning",
Editor="David H. Jonassen and Heinz Mandl",
Publisher="Springer-Verlag", Year=1990
}
@InCollection{Go:Talmud,
Title="Talmud", Chapter=2,
Author="Robert Goldenberg",
BookTitle="Back To The Sources: Reading the Classic {Jewish} Texts",
Editor="Barry W. Holtz",
Publisher="Summit Books", Address="New York", Year=1984
}
@Article{Sm:TPMHU,
Author="Pauline A. Smith",
Title="Towards a practical measure of hypertext usability",
Journal="Interacting with Computers",
Volume=8, Number=4, Year=1996, Pages=365 # "--" # 381,
URL={http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0953-5438(97)83779-4},
Annote="An interesting formalization of methods for evaluating
hypertext usability for information seeking in node/chunk-link
hypertext. Measures for the effectiveness, lostness, and confidence.
Criticism of the user of `error' concept in link following. Measures
based on paths created by readers' link following.",
Keyword="\K{Metric} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$
\K{information seeking} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation!Lostness}"
,SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Nielsen \& Levy in CACM 37(4) on preference
vs. performance~\cite{Ni:PvP}
\item Blackmon et al. in CHI'05~\cite{Hu:TAPWSNP}
\item A hypertext model based on Huffman coding (by Coulston and
Vitolo) in HT'01~\cite{Co:HTMHC}
\item Lost in hyperspace by Otter \& Johnson in
Interacting with Computers \cite{Ot:LHMM}
\item Ahuja and Webster (2001) \cite{Ah:PD}
in Interacting with Computers
\item Gwizdka and Spence (2007) \cite{Gw:IMLSWN}
in Interacting with Computers
\end{itemize}"
}
@Article{Ot:LHMM
,Author="M. Otter and J. Johnson"
,Title="Lost in hyperspace: metrics and mental models"
,Journal="Interacting with Computers" ,Volume=13 ,Pages=1#"--"#40
,Year=2000 ,Month=sep
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0953-5438(00)00030-8"
,Annote="Newer metrics of lostness than Smith (1996) \cite{Sm:TPMHU}."
,Keyword="\K{Metric} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$
\K{information seeking} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation!Lostness}"
,SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item P.~Smith (1996) \cite{Sm:TPMHU}
in Interacting with Computers
\item Ahuja and Webster (2001) \cite{Ah:PD}
in Interacting with Computers
\item Gwizdka and Spence (2007) \cite{Gw:IMLSWN}
in Interacting with Computers
\end{itemize}"
}
@Article{Ah:PD
,Title="Perceived disorientation: an examination of a new measure
to assess web design effectiveness"
,Author="Jaspreet S. Ahuja and Jane Webster"
,Journal="Interacting with Computers"
,Volume=14 ,Number=1 ,Pages=15#"--"#29
,Month=dec ,Year=2001
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0953-5438(01)00048-0"
,Annote="Abstract \begin{quotation}
In this paper, we present the development of a new measure of
perceived disorientation that helps to explain experiences with
Web-based systems. Two studies, incorporating over 300
participants, provide evidence for the measure's construct
validity. The first study is a survey that develops this new
measure and distinguishes it from ease of use. The second study,
an experiment investigating users performing an information
retrieval task on the Web, further distinguishes disorientation
from ease of use, and relates it to actions. Moreover, the study
compares the effects of Web designs containing simple and global
navigation systems; these systems related to perceived
disorientation but not to ease of use or actions. Finally, the
study examines disorientation's relationship with user
performance and demonstrates that perceived disorientation
relates more strongly than actions to performance. Our perceived
disorientation measure is simple and quick to administer to
users, and we conclude by suggesting that designers will find it
useful in assessing and comparing Web designs.
\end{quotation}"
,Keyword="\K{Metric} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$
\K{Navigation!Lostness}"
,SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item P.~Smith (1996) \cite{Sm:TPMHU}
in Interacting with Computers
\item Otter and Johnson (2000) \cite{Ot:LHMM}
in Interacting with Computers
\item Gwizdka and Spence (2007) \cite{Gw:IMLSWN}
in Interacting with Computers
\end{itemize}"
}
@InProceedings{Ba:MHU
,Author = "Elmaoun M. Babiker and Hiroko Fujihara and Craig D. B. Boyle"
,Title = "A metric for hypertext usability"
,BookTitle = "{SIGDOC} '91: Proceedings of the 9th annual international
conference on Systems documentation"
,Year = 1991
,Pages = 95#"--"#104
,Location = "Chicago, {IL}"
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/122778.122793"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
,Keyword="\K{Metric} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$
\K{information seeking} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation!Lostness}"
,SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Nielsen \& Levy in CACM 37(4) on preference
vs. performance~\cite{Ni:PvP}
\item P. A. Smith's Towards a Practical Measure
\ldots~\cite{Sm:TPMHU} \end{itemize}"
}
@InProceedings{Hu:TAPWSNP
,Author = "Marilyn Hughes Blackmon and Muneo Kitajima and Peter
G. Polson"
,Title = "Tool for accurately predicting website navigation problems,
non-problems, problem severity, and effectiveness of repairs"
,Booktitle = "{CHI} '05: Proceedings of the {SIGCHI} conference on Human
factors in computing systems"
,Year = 2005
,Pages = 31#"--"#40
,Location = "Portland, {OR}"
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1054972.1054978"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
,Keywords="\K{Navigation!Lostness}"
}
@Article{He:ISD,
Author="Leah K. Hennings and Nong Ye",
Title="Interaction of screen distances, screen letter heights
and source document distances",
Journal="Interacting with Computers", Volume=8, Number=4,
Pages=311#"--"#322,
Year=1996,
Annote="Task was proof-reading",
Keyword="\K{Reading}"
}
@InProceedings{Ny:AoO,
Title="The Art of the Obvious",
Author="E.~Nygren and M.~Lind and M.~Johnson and B.~Sandblad",
Pages=235#"--"#239,
BookTitle="CHI '92, conference proceedings, ACM Conference on
Human Factors in Computing Systems, striking a balance",
Editor="Penny Bauersfeld and John Bennett and Gene Lynch",
Month="3--7~" # may, Year=1992
}
@Article{Wa:RTVDU,
Author="Yvonne Waern and Carl Rollenhagen",
Title="Reading text from visual display units ({VDUs})",
Journal=ijmms, Volume=18, Year=1983, Pages=441#"--"#465,
Keyword="\K{Reading}"
}
@InCollection{Og:ECTC,
Author="Katsuhiko Ogawa",
Title="Evaluating Complexity of Task Content in Human-Computer
Interaction",
BookTitle="Work with Computers: Organizational, Management, Stress
and Health Aspects",
Editor="M.~J. Smith and G. Salvendy",
Publisher="Elsevier Science Publishers, B.V.", Address="Amsterdam",
Year=1989
}
@InProceedings{Re:CMT,
Author="Mimi Recker and Ashwin Ram",
Title="Cognitive Media Types as Indices for Hypermedia Learning
Environments",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the {AAAI-94} Workshop on Indexing and
Reuse in Multimedia Systems",
Address="Seattle, Washington, {USA}", Month=aug, Year=1994,
Note="Obtained from an electronic source"
}
@Misc{Sh:ML,
Author="Simon {Buckingham Shum}",
Title="The Missing Link: Hypermedia Usability Research \& The Web",
Note="Obtained from \url{http://kmi.open.ac.uk/~simonb/...}",
Month="18 " # jun, Year=1996
}
@Misc{Ge:EPRM,
Author="Fredric C. Gey",
Title="Evaluation of Probabilistic Retrieval Methods",
Address="{UC} Data Archive \& Technical Assistance, University of
California, Berkley",
Month="7 " # jul, Year=1995,
Note="Paper distributed at SIGIR '95~\cite{IR95} poster session",
Annote="Uses chi-square test to measure the accuracy of probability
estimates used in IR methods."
}
@InCollection{Di:TIMS,
Author="Andrew Dillon",
Title="{TIMS}: A Framework For The Design Of Usable Electronic Text",
Chapter=5, Pages=99#"--"#119,
BookTitle="Cognitive Aspects of Electronic Text Processing",
Editor="Herre van Oostendorp and Sjaak de Mul",
Publisher="Ablex Publishing Corporation", Year=1996,
Volume="{LVIII}", Series="Advances in Discourse Processes"
}
@Article{Di:TIME,
Author="Andrew Dillon",
Title="{TIME} --- A multi-leveled framework for evaluating \ldots",
Journal="International Journal on Digital Libraries",
Volume=2, Number="2/3", Pages=170 # "--" # 177, Year=1999,
ISSN="1432-5012 (printed version), 1432-1300 (electronic version)",
Annote="Contrast with Nielsen's \emph{The Matters That Really
Matter}~\cite{Ni:Usab}",
}
@InCollection{Ka:N2G,
Author="Frank Kappe",
Title="The need for second-generation hypermedia systems",
Chapter=8, Pages=88#"--"#102,
BookTitle="Hyper-G {now} HYPERWAVE: The Next Generation Web Solution",
Editor="Hermann Maurer",
Publisher="Addison Wesley Longman Limited", Year=1996,
ISBN="0-201-40346-3"
}
@Article{Wo:CafeJus,
Author="Hazel Woodward and Fytton Rowland and Cliff McKnight and Carolyn
Pritchett and Jack Meadows",
Title="Caf\'e Jus: an Electronic Journal User Survey",
Journal=JoDI, URL="http://jodi.ecs.soton.ac.uk/",
Volume=1, Number=3, Month=oct, Year=1998
}
@Article{Wi:OHSIS,
Author="Uffe Kock Wiil",
Title="Open Hypermedia: System, Interoperability and Standards",
Journal=JoDI, URL="http://jodi.ecs.soton.ac.uk/",
Volume=1, Number=2, Month=jan, Year=1998
}
@InCollection{Fr:IRIntro,
Author="W. B. Frakes",
Title="Introduction to Information Storage and Retrieval Systems",
Chapter=1, Pages=1#"--"#12,
BookTitle="Information Retrieval Data Structures \& Algorithms",
Editor="William B. Frakes and Ricardo Baeza-Yates",
Publisher="Prentice-Hall", Year=1992,
ISBN="0-13-463837-9", LCC="92-8197", CallNo="QA76.9.D351543"
}
@InProceedings{Na:Rules,
Author="Marc Nanard and Jocyelyne Nanard and Paul Kahn",
Title="Pushing Reuse in Hypermedia Design: Golden Rules,
Design Patterns and Constructive Templates",
Pages=11#"--"#20,
BookTitle=HT98, CROSSREF="HT98",
}
@InProceedings{Be:Patterns,
Author="Mark Bernstein",
Title="Patterns of Hypertext",
Pages=21#"--"#29,
BookTitle=HT98, CROSSREF="HT98",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/276627.276630",
Keyword="\K{link structures}"
}
@InProceedings{Pa:HTisCF,
Author="Seongbin Park",
Title="Structural Properties of Hypertext",
Pages=180#"--"#187,
BookTitle=HT98, CROSSREF="HT98",
}
@Article{Wi:HTvsB,
Author="Barbara M. Wildemuth and Charles P. Friedman and
Stephen M. Downs",
Title="Hypertext versus Boolean Access to Biomedical Information: A
Comparison of Effectiveness, Efficiency, and User Preferences",
Journal="{ACM} Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction",
Volume=5, Number=2, Month=jun, Year=1998, Pages=156#"--"#183,
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Testing} $\bullet$
\K{Information Retrieval}",
Annote="See the background section"
}
@Article{Cr:SurvProbIR,
Author="Fabio Crestani and Mounia Lalmas and van Rijsbergen,
Cornelias J. and Iain Campbell",
Title="``{Is} This Document Relevant?\ldots {Probably}'': A Survey of
Probabilistic Models in Information Retrieval",
Journal="{ACM} Computing Surveys",
Volume=30, Number=4, Month=dec, Year=1998, Pages=528#"--"#552,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{Review} $\bullet$
\K{Information Retrieval!probabilistic}"
}
@Article{Zo:Sim,
Author="Justin Zobel and Alistair Moffat",
Title="Exploring the Similarity Space",
Journal="{ACM} {SIGIR} Forum",
Volume=32, Number=1, Month="Spring", Year=1998,
Pages=18#"--"#34,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval!weighting}",
SeeAlso="Jones\&Furnas~\cite{Jo:GeoSim}"
}
@Article{Blu:TPJ-LT1,
Author="James Blustein",
Title="Tracking links in a single {HTML} document",
Journal="The Perl Journal",
Year="in press"
}
@InProceedings{Ka:SAGloss,
Author="Hermann Kaindl and Stefan Kramer",
Title ="Semiautomatic Generation of Glossary Links: A practical
Solution",
BookTitle=HT99, CROSSREF="HT99", Pages=3 # "--" # 12,
}
@InProceedings{Nu:WWQ,
Author="Peter J. N{\"u}rnberg and Helen Ashman",
Title ="What Was The Question? Reconciling Open Hypermedia and
{World Wide Web} Research",
Pages=83#"--"#90,
BookTitle=HT99, CROSSREF="HT99",
Keyword="\K{System!WWW} $\bullet$ \K{System!OHS} $\bullet$
\K{HT!Definition}"
}
@InProceedings{Bo:USWA,
Author="Niels Olof Bouvin",
Title ="Unifying Strategies for Web Augmentation",
Pages=91#"--"#100,
BookTitle=HT99, CROSSREF="HT99"
}
@Article{Ma:OCT,
Author="Gary Marchiono",
Title="Information-Seeking Strategies of Novices Using A
Full-Text Electronic Encyclopedia",
Journal=jasis, Volume=40, Number=1, Month=jan, Year=1989,
Pages=54#"--"#66,
SeeAlso="Chen\&Rada~\cite{Ch:Meta} cite for definition of
open/closed tasks",
Keyword="\K{information seeking} $\bullet$ \K{Expertise}"
}
@Misc{t-s:Tut95,
Author="Jean Tague-Sutcliffe and James Blustein and Paul Kantor",
Note="Michael Nelson appeared in place of Tague-Sutcliffe",
Title="What Differences Are Significant? {S}tatistical Analysis
of {IR} Tests",
HowPublished="Tutorial presented at {SIGIR '95} conference",
month=jul, Year=1995
}
@InProceedings{He:TT93,
Author="Marti A. Hearst and Christian Plaunt",
Title="Subtopic Structuring for Full-length Document Access",
BookTitle="{SIGIR '93}. Proceedings of the sixteenth annual
international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and Development
in Information Retrieval",
Month="27~" # jun # "--1~" # jul, Year=1993,
Address="Pittsburgh, {PA}, {USA}",
Organization="{ACM} {SIGIR}"
}
@InProceedings{Ca:DLS98,
Author="L. A. Carr and W. Hall and S. Hitchcock",
Title="Link Services of Link Agents?",
BookTitle=HT98, CROSSREF="HT98",
Pages=113#"--"#122
}
@InProceedings{Pr:LbI,
Author="Morgan N. Price and Gene Golovchinsky and Bill N. Schilit",
Title="Linking By Inking: Trailblazing in a Paper-like Hypertext",
BookTitle=HT98, CROSSREF="HT98",
Pages=30#"--"#39,
Keyword="\K{System!XLibris} $\bullet$ \K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Sc:DLIA,
Author="Bill N. Schilit and Morgan N. Price and Gene Golovchinsky",
Title="Digital Library Information Appliances",
BookTitle=DL98, CROSSREF="DL98",
Keyword="\K{System!XLibris} $\bullet$ \K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:AnnBP2DL,
Author="Catherine C. Marshall",
Title="Annotation: from paper books to the digital library",
BookTitle=DL98, CROSSREF="DL98",
Pages=131 # "--" # 140,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/263690.263806",
Keyword="\K{annotation}",
SeeAlso="HT98 follow-up~\cite{Ma:EcoAnn}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:EcoAnn,
Author="Catherine C. Marshall",
Title="Toward an ecology of hypertext annotation",
BookTitle=HT98, CROSSREF="HT98",
Pages=40 # "--" # 49,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/276627.276632",
Keyword="\K{annotation}",
SeeAlso="follows-up DL98 paper~\cite{Ma:AnnBP2DL}"
}
@Article{Li:MG
,Author="Lawrence Lipking"
,Title="The Marginal Gloss"
,Journal="Critical Inquiry" ,Month="Summer" ,Year=1977
,Volume=3 ,Number=4 ,Pages=609#"--"#655
,URL = "\url{http://www.jstor.org/stable/1343054}"
,ISSN = "00931896"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{McE:HT99,
Author="John E. McEneaney",
Title="Visualizing and Assessing Navigation in Hypertext",
BookTitle=HT99, CROSSREF="HT99",
Pages= 61 # "--" # 70,
Keyword="\K{Metric} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation} $\bullet$
\K{individual differences}",
SeeAlso="Botafogo et al.~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics} and HT2K
follow-up~\cite{McE:HT2K}",
}
@InProceedings{McE:HT2K,
Author="John E. McEneaney",
Title="Navigational Correlates of Comprehension in Hypertext",
BookTitle=HT2K, CROSSREF="HT2K",
Keyword="\K{Metric} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation} $\bullet$
\K{individual differences}",
SeeAlso="Botafogo et al.~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics} and preceding HT99
article~\cite{McE:HT99}",
}
@Article{To:UFBET,
Author="Elaine G. Toms",
Title="Understanding and facilitating the browsing of electronic text",
Journal=ijhcs, Year=2000, Volume=52, Pages=423 # "--" # 452,
Keyword="\K{Testing} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation}",
SeeAlso="Browsing in ARIST 28~\cite{Ch:Browsing}"
}
@Article{Su:TRIA,
Author="Alistair Sutcliffe",
Title="Task-related information analysis",
Journal=ijhcs, Volume=47, Year=1997, Pages=223 # "--" # 257,
Keyword="\K{Testing}"
}
@Article{Su:MMA,
Author="Alistair Sutcliffe and Michele Ryan and Ann Doubleday and Mark
Springnett",
Title="Model mismatch analysis: towards a deeper explanation of users'
usability problems",
Journal="Behaviour \& Information Technology", Year=2000,
Volume=19, Number=1, Pages=43#"--"#55,
}
@Article{My:IntroHCI,
Journal=int, Volume="{V}", Number=2, Month=mar, Year=1998,
Pages=44 # "--" # 54,
Author="Brad A. Myers",
Title="Introduction to human-computer interaction: {A} brief history of
human-computer interaction technology",
SeeAlso="Queue 2006 article about future of HCI~\cite{Ca:TFHCI}",
Keyword="\K{HCI!Intro} $\bullet$ \K{Review}"
}
@Article{No:HCDCH,
Journal=int, Volume="{XII}", Number=4, Month=jul, Year=2005,
Pages=14 # "--" # 17 #", "#19,
Author="Donald A. Norman",
Title="Human-Centered Design Considered Harmful",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1070960.1070976",
Keyword="\K{task\_analysis} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!Intro} $\bullet$
\K{activity theory}"
}
@Article{No:ACD,
Journal=int, Volume="{VI}", Number=3, Month=may, Year=1999,
Pages=38 # "--" # 43,
Author="Donald A. Norman",
Title="Affordance, conventions, and design",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item P.O.E.T. by Norman~\cite{No:POET},
\item article in reflections column about this
article~\cite{Pe:antu}, and
\item parts of The Invisible Computer (also by
Norman)~\cite[pp.\,123--126, 132, 174]{No:IC}
\end{itemize}",
Annote="affordances (perceived and actual)",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/301153.301168",
Keyword="\K{Classic}"
}
@Article{My:ChallHCI,
Journal=int, Volume="{I}", Number=1, Year=1994,
Pages=73 # "--" # 83,
Author="Brad Myers",
Title="Challenges of {HCI} design and implementation",
Keyword="\K{HCI!Intro}"
}
@Article{Tu:intuit
,Author="Phil Turner"
,Title="Towards an account of intuitiveness"
,Journal="Behaviour \& Information Technology"
,Year=2008
,Volume=27 ,Number=6 ,Pages=475#"--"#482
,Abstract="Intuitive systems are usable systems. Design guidelines
advocate intuitiveness and vendors claim it – but what does it
mean for a user interface, interactive system, or device to be
intuitive? A review of the use of the term ‘intuitive’ indicates
that it has two distinct but overlapping meanings, namely
intuitiveness based on familiarity and intuitiveness reflecting
our embodiment (and frequently both). While everyday usage
indicates that familiarity means either a passing acquaintance
or an intimacy with something or someone, it will be concluded
that familiarity might best be equated with ‘know-how’, which in
turn is based on a deep, often tacit, understanding. The
intuitive nature of tangible user interfaces will in turn be
attributed to embodiment rather than tangibility per
se. Merleau-Ponty writes that it is through our bodies that we
‘prehend’ the world. A number of disciplines now regard
action–perception as so closely coupled that they are better
considered as a dyad rather than separately. A modified
treatment of action–perception coupling is proposed, with
familiarity providing an epistemic core, as the basis of
intuitiveness."
,URL="http://www.informaworld.com/10.1080/01449290701292330"
,SeeAlso="\cite{KB:2intuit}, \cite{Ra:inISfam}"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!Intro!Intuitive}"
}
@Article{Ra:inISfam
,Author="Jef Raskin"
,Title="Intuitive equals familiar"
,Journal=cacm ,Volume=37 ,Number=9 ,Pages=17 # "-- " # 18
,Month=sep ,Year=1994
,SeeAlso="\cite{KB:2intuit}, \cite{Tu:intuit}"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!Intro!Intuitive}"
}
@Article{KB:2intuit,
Journal="Computer Language", Month=aug, Year=1989,
Title="It takes two to intuit",
Author="Stan Kelly-Bootle",
Pages="131, 133, 134, 137, 138",
SeeAlso="\cite{Ra:inISfam}, \cite{Ra:lfHI}, \cite{Tu:intuit}",
Keyword="\K{HCI!Intro!Intuitive}"
}
@Article{Ra:lfHI,
Journal=cacm, Volume=40, Number=2, Month=feb, Year=1997,
Pages=98 # "--" # 101,
Title="Looking for a humane interface: Will computers ever become easy
to use?",
Author="Jef Raskin",
Keyword="\K{HCI!Intro}"
}
@Article{Ho:blunders,
Journal="Computer Graphics",
Volume=29, Number=4, Month=nov, Year=1995,
Pages=20 # "--" # 24,
Title="Top Ten Blunders by Visual Designers",
Author="William Horton",
Keyword="\K{HCI!Intro}"
}
@Article{Ru:22Tips,
Journal=int, Volume="{I}", Number=1,
Month=jan, Year=1994, Pages=35#"--"#40,
Title="Twenty-Two Tips for a Happier Healthier Prototype",
Author="James Rudd and Scott Isensee",
Note="Reprinted from Proceedings of the Human Factors Society 35th
Annual Meeting, 1991",
SeeAlso="
\begin{itemize}
\item follow-up by Berghel~\cite{Be:NWP}
\item their reply to Berghel~\cite{Ru:RtB}
\item their follow-up to tip~3 (about high fidelity)~\cite{Ru:LovHi}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping}"
}
@Article{Be:NWP,
Journal=int, Volume="{I}", Number=2,
Month=apr, Year=1994, Pages=49#"--"#54,
Title="New Wave Prototyping: Use and Abuse of Vacuous Prototypes",
Author="Hal Berghel",
SeeAlso="
\begin{itemize}
\item original article~\cite{Ru:22Tips}
\item original author's (sidebar) reply~\cite{Ru:RtB} and Tip~\#23
\item Berghel's seamless prototyping reference~\cite{Be:SlessP}
\item Another take on the issue~\cite{Ho:PGICCD}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!prototyping!paper prototypes}"
}
@Article{Ru:RtB,
Journal=int, Volume="{I}", Number=2,
Month=apr, Year=1994, Pages=52#"--"#53,
Title="Origins of the Vacuous Prototyping Problem: A Response to {Hal}
{Berghel}",
Author="James Rudd and Scott Isensee",
Note="Sidebar to article~\cite{Be:NWP} about earlier
article~\cite{Ru:22Tips}",
SeeAlso="
\begin{itemize}
\item original article~\cite{Ru:22Tips}
\item main article~\cite{Be:NWP}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping}"
}
@Article{Ru:LovHi,
Journal=int, Volume="{III}", Number=1, Month=jan, Year=1996,
Pages=76 # "--" # 85,
Title="Low vs. high-fidelity prototyping debate",
Author="James Rudd and Ken Stern and Scott Isensee",
URL="http://www.acm.org/pubs/citations/journals/interactions/1996-3-1/p76-rudd/",
SeeAlso="
\begin{itemize}
\item 22 Tips (especially \#3)~\cite{Ru:22Tips}
\item Berghel's response to 22 Tips~\cite{Be:NWP}
\item Prototying for tiny hands~\cite{Re:PapProto}
\item Another take on the issue~\cite{Ho:PGICCD}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!prototyping!paper prototypes}"
}
@Article{Ho:PGICCD
,Author = "Lars Erik Holmquist"
,Title = "Prototyping: generating ideas or cargo cult designs?"
,Journal = int ,Volume = "12" ,Number=2
,Month = mar#" + "#apr ,Year=2005 ,Pages = 48#"--"#54
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1052438.1052465"
,SeeAlso="
\begin{itemize}
\item 22 Tips (especially \#3)~\cite{Ru:22Tips}
\item Berghel's response to 22 Tips~\cite{Be:NWP}
\item Reply to Berghel~\cite{Ru:RtB}
\end{itemize}"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!prototyping!paper prototypes}"
}
@Article{Be:SlessP,
Journal="{ACM} {SIGICE} Quarterly",
Author="H. Berghel",
Title="On Seamless Prototyping",
Year=1994,
SeeAlso="Cited in his reply to Rudd and Insensee's 22
Tips~\cite{Be:NWP}",
Note="Citation not confirmed --- not in ACM DL",
Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!prototyping!paper prototypes}"
}
@Article{Re:PapProto,
Title="Prototyping for Tiny Fingers",
Author="Marc Rettig",
Journal=cacm, Volume=37, Number=4, Year=1994,
URL="http://www.acm.org/pubs/citations/journals/cacm/1994-37-4/p21-rettig/",
Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping!paper prototypes}"
}
@Misc{UIE:UPPMR,
Title="Using Paper Prototypes to Manage Risk",
URL="http://world.std.com/~uieweb/paper.htm",
Note="Note in webpage `This article originally appeared in Software
Design and Publisher Magazine in October 1996.'",
Key="User Interface Engineering",
Year=1996,
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Paper Protoypes: Still Our Favorite~\cite{Sc:PPSOF}
\item Five Paper Protoyping Tips~\cite{Kl:5PPT}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping!paper prototypes}"
}
@Article{Kl:5PPT,
Author="Matthew Klee",
Title="Five Paper Protyping Tips",
Journal=E4D, Volume=7, Number=2, Pages=2#"--"#4,
Month=mar#"/"#apr, Year=2000,
URL="http://world.std.com/~uieweb/paperproto.htm",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Paper Protoypes: Still Our Favorite~\cite{Sc:PPSOF}
\item Using Paper Prototypes to Manage Risk~\cite{UIE:UPPMR}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping!paper prototypes}"
}
@Article{Sc:PPSOF,
Author="Tara Scanlon",
Title="Paper Protoypes: Still Our Favorite",
Journal=E4D, Volume=5, Number=3, Pages=2#"--"#4,
Month=may#"/"#jun, Year=1998,
URL="http://world.std.com/~uieweb/prototyp.htm",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Five Paper Protoyping Tips~\cite{Kl:5PPT}
\item Using Paper Prototypes to Manage Risk~\cite{UIE:UPPMR}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping!paper prototypes}"
}
@InProceedings{La:ISESUID,
Author="James A. Landay and Brad A. Myers",
Title="Interactive sketching for the early stages of user interface design",
BookTitle="Conference proceedings on Human factors in computing systems",
Month=7#"--"#11#" "#may, Year=1995, Address="Denver, {CO}, {USA}",
Pages=43#"--"#50,
URL="http://www.acm.org/pubs/citations/proceedings/chi/223904/p43-landay/",
Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping!paper prototypes}"
}
@InProceedings{Th:PTT,
Author="Michael Thompson and Nina Wishbow",
Title="Prototyping: tools and techniques: improving software and
documentation quality through rapid prototyping",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the 10th annual international conference on
Systems documentation",
Month=3#"--"#11#" "#oct, Year=1992, Address="Ottawa, Canada",
Pages=191#"--"#199,
URL="http://www.acm.org/pubs/citations/proceedings/doc/147001/p191-thompson/",
Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping!paper prototypes}"
}
@Article{Le:HEW3P,
Title="A heuristic evaluation of a {World Wide Web} prototype",
Author="Michael D. Levi and Frederick G. Conrad",
Journal=int, Volume="{III}", Number=4, Month=jul, Year=1996,
Pages=50 # "--" # 61,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/234813.234819"
,Keyword="\K{Expertise} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!prototyping}"
}
@InProceedings{Ha:BUfB,
Title="Building usability in from the beginning: analyzing users and
their tasks",
Author="JoAnn Hackos and Janice Redish",
BookTitle="Annual ACM Conference on Systems Documentation", Year=1997,
Pages=105 # "--" # 130,
Keyword="\K{task\_analysis} $\bullet$ \K{HCI}"
}
@Article{Ni:IUID,
Title="Iterative User-Interface Design",
Author="Jakob Nielsen",
Journal="Computer", Month=nov, Year=1993, Pages=32 #"--"#41,
Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:XLRG,
Title="Introducing a digital library reading appliance into a reading
group",
Author="Catherine C. Marshall and Morgan N. Price and Gene Golovchinsky
and Bill N. Schilit",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the fourth ACM conference on Digital
libraries",
Year=1999, Pages=77 # "--" # 83,
Address="Berkeley, California, {USA}",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/313238.313262",
SeeAlso="See \emph{Reading and Writing the Electronic Book}
\cite[\S7.1 (pp.\,147--149)]{Ma:RWeB} for more details",
Keyword="\K{System!XLibris} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@InProceedings{Sh:BLHT99,
Title="Beyond location: hypertext workspaces and non-linear views",
Author="Frank M. Shipman and Catherine C. Marshall and Mark LeMere",
BookTitle=HT99, CROSSREF="HT99",
Pages=121 # "--" # 130,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/294469.294498",
Keyword="\K{HT!Spatial hypertext}"
}
@InProceedings{Jo:SS,
Title="Storyspace as a hypertext system for writers and readers of
varying ability",
Author="Michael Joyce",
BookTitle=HT91, CROSSREF="HT91",
Year=1991, Pages=381 # "--" # 387,
Keyword="\K{System!Storyspace}"
}
@InCollection{Ni:HTUsab95,
Title="Hypertext Usability",
Chapter=10, Pages=279 # "--" # 307, CROSSREF="Nielsen95",
BookTitle="Multimedia and Hypertext: The Internet and Beyond",
Author="Jakob Nielsen",
Publisher="Academic Press", Year=1995,
Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Review}"
}
@InCollection{Di:Myths,
Title="Myths, Misconceptions and an Alternative Perspective on
Information, Usage and the Electronic Medium",
Author="Andrew Dillon",
BookTitle="Hypertext and Cognition",
Editor="Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Rouet and Jarmo J. Levonen and Andrew
Dillon and Rand J. Spiro",
Publisher="Lawrence Erlbaum Associates", Year=1996,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych}"
}
@InProceedings{Ze:fluidlinks,
Title="Fluid links for informed and incremental link transitions",
Author="Polle T. Zellweger and Bay-Wei Chang and Jock D. Mackinlay",
BookTitle=HT98, CROSSREF="HT98",
Year=1998,
Pages=50 # "--" # 57,
Keyword="\K{HCI!interface}"
}
@Article{Sp:FNav,
Title="A framework for navigation",
Author="Robert Spence",
Journal=ijhcs, Volume=51, Number=5, Year=1999, Pages=919 # "--" # 945,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/ijhc.1999.0265",
Annote="navigation=learning a space, searching=using a space",
SeeAlso="Browsing chapter in ARIST~\cite{Ch:Browsing}, Look out for Paul
Maglio stuff too",
Keyword="\K{Navigation} $\bullet$ \K{mental/cognitive model} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!interface} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@Article{Ma:ITSatis,
Title="Variables affecting information technology end-user satisfaction:
a meta-analysis of the empirical literature",
Author="Mo Adam Mahmood and Janice M. Burn and Leopoldo A. Gemoets and
Carmen Jacquez",
Journal=ijhcs, Year=2000, Volume=52, Number=4, Pags=751 # "--" # 771,
URL="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-45FC2DD-1X/2/a8a068d8085ee7702dd14799a2184af6",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Chen \& Rada's meta-analysis of HT~\cite{Ch:Meta} and
\item Dillon \& Morris's ARIST chapter about theories and
models~\cite{Di:UAIT}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{Meta-analysis} $\bullet$ \K{Usability}
$\bullet$ \K{user satisfaction}"
}
@InCollection{Di:UAIT,
Title="User Acceptance of Information Technology: Theories and Models",
Author="Andrew Dillon and Michael G. Morris",
BookTitle=ARIST, Volume=31, Year=1996,
Chapter=1, Pages=3#"--"#32,
Editor="Martha E. Williams",
Publisher=asis,
SeeAlso="\cite{Ma:ITSatis}",
Keyword="\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{Usability}"
}
@Article{Ov:AT,
Title="Annotation Technology",
Author="Ilia A. Ovsiannikov and Michael A. Arbib and Thomas H. McNeill",
Journal=ijhcs, Year=1999, Volume=50, Number=4, Pages=329 # "--" # 362,
Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW} $\bullet$ \K{Review}",
Annote="Largely about their system (for the WWW) but a review of work by
others too. Supported in part by FX/PAL. See also their webpages."
}
@Article{Mo:odde,
Title="Ontology-driven document enrichment: principles, tools and
applications",
Author="Enrico Motta and Simon {Buckinghan Shum} and Hohn Domingue",
Journal=ijhcs, Year=2000, Volume=52, Pages=1071 # "--" # 1109,
SeeAlso="Simon's poster at HT'99"
}
@Article{Ca:FNIS,
Title="Facilitating navigation in information spaces: Road-signs on the
{World Wide Web}",
Author="Christopher S. Campbell and Paul Maglio",
Journal=ijhcs, Year=1999, Volume=50, Pages=309 # "--" # 327,
Comment="abstract only",
Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW}",
Annote="From the abstract: `A series of experiments were conducted to
evaluate whether simple hyperlink annotations --- traffic lights that
represent Internet connection speeds --- can facilitate web
navigation. Traffic lights are small red, yellow or green images
added around the anchor text of each link indicating its connection
speed, red for for slow, yellow for somewhat fast and green for
fastest. The first two experiments showed that traffic lights do not
facilitate perceptual processes involved in web navigation (i.e. link
localization and visual search). However, traffic lights also
\emph{do not distract from the process of finding links in hypertext
documents and, thus have no perceptual performance cost}. The third
experiment showed that \emph{traffic lights facilitate web navigation
performance by improving link evaluation and decision processes. This
improvement is particularly marked when link relevance is low or
undifferentiated}. It was concluded that supplying users with
information about Internet connection speeds improves web navigation
performance. Thus, traffic lights provide functional cues for
efficiently navigating the web.' (emphasis added)",
SeeAlso="\cite{Ma:TDPI,Wr:CCLA}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:TDPI,
Author="Paul P. Maglio and Christopher S. Campbell",
Title="Tradeoffs in Displaying Peripheral Information",
BookTitle="The Future Is Here {CHI} 2000",
Address="The Hague, Amsterdam",
HowPublished="{CHI} Letters Volume~2 Issue~1",
Date=1 # "--" # 6 # "~" # apr, Year=2000,
SeeAlso="\cite{Ca:FNIS}",
Annote="`We report a series of experiments on scrolling displays aimed
at examining tradeoffs between distraction \ldots and memorability'"
}
@Article{Jo:YGOMS,
Author="Bonnie E. John",
Title="Why {GOMS}?",
Journal=int, Volume="{II}", Number=4, Year=1995,
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{GOMS} "
}
@Article{Jo:WhGOMS,
Title="Using {GOMS} for user interface design and evaluation: which
technique?",
Author="Bonnie E. John and David E. Kieras",
Journal=TOCHI, Volume=3, Number=4, Month=dec, Year=1996,
Pages=287 # "--" # 319,
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{GOMS}"
}
@Article{Jo:GOMSFam,
Title="The {GOMS} family of user interface analysis techniques:
comparison and contrast",
Author="Bonnie E. John and David E. Kieras",
Journal=TOCHI, Volume=3, Number=4, Month=dec, Year=1996,
Pages=320 # "--" # 351,
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{GOMS} $\bullet$ \K{Review}"
}
@Article{Gr:VGOMS,
Title="Project {Ernestine}: Validating a {GOMS} Analysis for Predicting
and Explaining Real-World Task Performance",
Author="Wayne D. Gray and Bonnie E. Jon and Michael E. Atwood",
Journal="Human-Computer Interaction", Volume=8, Year=1993,
Pages=237 # "--" # 309,
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{GOMS}"
}
@Article{Gr:GOMSisGreat,
Author="Wayne D. Gray and Bonnie E. John and Michael E. Atwood",
Title="Project {Ernestine}: Validating a {GOMS} Analysis for
Predicting and Explaining Real-World Task Performance",
Journal="Human-Computer Interaction", Volume=8, Year=1993,
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{GOMS} "
}
@Article{Gr:BHLCSS,
Author="Stephen J. Green",
Title="Building Hypertext Links By Computing Semantic Similarity",
Journal="{IEEE} Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering",
Volume=11, Number=5, month=sep # "/" # oct, Year=1999,
Pages=713 # "--" # 730
}
@InProceedings{Pi:RDMASHM,
Author="Marios Pittas and Steve Sommerville and Dave Saunders",
Title="Reader's document models and access strategies in hypermedia and
multimedia systems",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the 1995 {ACM} symposium on Applied computing",
Year=1995, Pages=253 # "--" # 257,
Address="Nashville, {TN}, {USA}"
}
@InProceedings{Lo:HMRMPA,
Author="David B. Lowe and Andrew J. Bucknell and Richard D. Webby",
Title="Improving Hypermedia Development: A Reference Model-Based Process
Assessment Method",
BookTitle=HT99, CROSSREF="HT99",
Pages=139 # "--" #146,
Annote="developmental model, prototyping (p.\,145)",
Keyword="\K{System!SUE} $\bullet$ \K{System!IMPACT} $\bullet$
\K{System!IMPACT-A} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!prototyping}"
}
@InProceedings{Ro:IDSW3A,
Author="Martin R{\"o}scheisen and Christina Mogensen and Terry Winograd",
Title="Interaction Design for Shared World-Wide Web Annotations",
BookTitle="{CHI} '95 Proceedings", Year=1995
}
@InProceedings{Ku:AUvIU,
Author="Masaaki Kurosu and Kaori Kashimura",
Title="Apparent Usability vs. Inherent Usability: Experimental analysis
on the determinants of the apparent usability",
BookTitle="{CHI} '95 Proceedings", Year=1995
}
@InCollection{Ed:CMNHE,
Title="`Lost in Hyperspace': Cognitive Mapping and Navigation in a
Hypertext Environment",
Author="Deborah M. Edwards and Lynda Hardman",
BookTitle=HTTiP, CROSSREF="McA:HTTiP",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation} $\bullet$ \K{Info
Shape}?"
}
@Article{Wo:GKM,
Title="A comparative study of gestural, keyboard, and mouse interfaces",
Author="Catherine G. Wolf",
Journal="Behaviour \& Information Technology", Volume=11, Number=1,
Pages=13 # "--" # 23,
Year=1992,
Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@Article{Gi:RDKHCIE,
Title="Network and multidimensional representations of the declarative
knowledge of human-computer interface experts",
Author="Douglas J. Gillan",
Journal=IJMMS, Year=1992, Volume=36, Pages=587 # "--" # 615,
Keyword="\K{System!Pathfinder} $\bullet$ \K{HCI} $\bullet$
\K{mental model}"
}
@Article{Be:IDA,
Author="Izak Benbasat and Peter Todd",
Title="An experimental investigation of interface design alternatives:
icon vs. text and direct manipulation vs. menus",
Journal=IJMMS, Volume=38, NUmber=3, Year=1993, Pages=369 # "--" # 402,
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Individual Differences in the Use of Command Line and Menu
Computer Interfaces~\cite{We:IDUCLM}
\item The effects of maps and textual information on navigation
in a desktop virtual environment by Schlender et
al.~\cite{Sc:MTINVD}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861} $\bullet$ \K{menus}"
}
@Article{Cy:UCP,
Author="Allen Cypher and Shifteh Karimi",
Title="User-Centered Processes",
Journal=int, Month=jul, year=1994
}
@Article{Ol:VIBE,
Author="Kai A. Olsen and Robert R. Korfhage and Kenneth M. Sochats and
Michael B. Spring and James G. Williams",
Title="Visualization of a Document Collection: The {VIBE} System",
Journal=IPM, Volume=29, Number=1, Year=1993, Pages=69 # "--" # 81,
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$ \K{HT!Spatial hypertext}
$\bullet$ \K{System!VIBE}"
}
@InProceedings{Ga:TWWW,
Author="William W. Gaver",
Title="Oh What A Tangled Web We Weave: Metaphor and Mapping in Graphical
Interfaces",
BookTitle="{CHI} '95 Mosaic of Creativity", Year=1995,
Address="Denver, {CO}, {USA}"
}
@InProceedings{Mu:USDiT,
Author="Robert M. Mulligan and Mark W. Altom and David K. Simkin",
Title="User Interface Design in the Trenches: Some Tips on Shooting from
the Hip",
BookTitle="Human factors in computing systems conference proceedings on
Reaching through technology", Year=1991
}
@Article{Ki:BDT,
Author="John I. Kiger",
Title="The depth/breadth trade-off in the design of menu-driven user
interfaces",
Journal=IJMMS, Volume=20, year=1984, Pages=201 # "--" # 213,
SeeAlso="Halgren and Cooke on menus~\cite{Ha:TEVMR}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861} $\bullet$ \K{menus}"
}
@InProceedings{La:WPD,
Author="Kevin Larson and Mary Czerwinski",
Title="Web Page Design: Implications of Memory, Structure, and Scent for
Information Retrieval",
BookTitle=SIGCHI98, CROSSREF="CHI98",
Pages = 25 #"--"# 32,
URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/274644.274649",
Annote="Confirms Kiger's~\cite{Ki:BDT} research as applied to webpages",
Keyword="\K{menus} $\bullet$ \K{information scent} $\bullet$
\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InProceedings{La:TREC6-I,
Author="Eric Lagergren and Paul Over",
Title="Comparing Interactive Information Retrieval Systems Across Sites:
The {TREC}-6 Interactive Track Matrix Experiment",
BookTitle="{SIGIR} '98", Address="Melbourne, Australia", Year=1998,
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Information Retrieval}"
}
@Article{Pr:CUI,
Author="R. Prates and C. {de Souza} and S. Barbosa",
Title="A Method of Evaluating the Communicability of User Interfaces",
Journal=int, Volume="{VII}", Vumber=1, Month=jan, Year=2000,
Pages=31 # "--" # 38,
Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@InCollection{Se:BUCOLH,
Author="Abigail Sellen and Anne Nicol",
Title="Building User-centered On-line Help",
Pages=143 # "--" # 153,
BookTitle="The Art of Human-Computer Interface Design",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc.", Year=1990,
Editor="Brenda Laurel"
}
@Article{Ea:TEU,
Author="K. D. Eason",
Title="Towards the experimental study of usability",
Journal="Behaviour And Information Technology",
Year=1984, Volume=3, Number=2, Pages=133 #"--"# 143,
Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@InCollection{Blu:ARIST35,
Title="Methods of Generating and Evaluating Hypertext",
Author="James Blustein and Mark Staveley",
BookTitle=ARIST, Volume=35, Year=2001, pages=299 #"--"# 335,
Editor="Martha E. Williams", Publisher="Information Today, Inc.",
Address="Medford, New Jersey",
Note="Published on behalf of the American Society for Information
Science and Technology",
}
@Article{He:6DAp1,
Title="Design For What? {Six} Dimensions of Activity ({Part}~1 of 2)",
Author="Austin Henderson",
Journal=int, Volume="{VII}", Number=5, Year=2000, Month=sep # " + " # oct,
Pages=17 # "--" # 22,
SeeAlso="Part~2 \cite{He:6DAp2}",
Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@Article{He:6DAp2,
Title="Design For What? {Six} Dimensions of Activity ({Part}~2 of 2)",
Author="Austin Henderson",
Journal=int, Volume="{VII}", Number=6, Year=2000, Month=nov # " + " # dec,
Pages=25 # "--" # 30,
SeeAlso="Part~1 \cite{He:6DAp1}",
Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@Article{Ma:CDGW,
Title="Crosscurrents Cultural Dimensions and Global Web User-Interface
Design",
Author="Aaron Marcus and Emilie {West Gould}",
Journal=int, Volume="{VII}", Number=4, Year=2000, Month=jul # " + " # aug,
Pages=32 # "--" # 46,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/345190.345238",
Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors}",
Annote="Abstract `This paper introduces dimensions of culture, as
analyzed by Geert Hofstede in his classic study of cultures in
organizations, and considers how they might affect user-interfaces
designs. Examples from the Web illustrate the cultural dimensions.'"
}
@Article{Ho:CMW,
Author="Molly E. Holzschlag",
Title="Color My World",
Journal="Web Techniques", ISSN="1086-556X",
Volume=5, Number=9, Month=sep, Year=2000,
Pages="38, 40, 42",
Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!colour}"
}
@Article{La:CCSD
,Author="Olin Lagon"
,Title="Culturally Correct Site Design"
,Journal="Web Techniques"
,Volume=5 ,Number=9 ,Month=sep ,Year=2000
,Pages=49#"--"#51
,Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors} $\bullet$ \K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Article{Sc:GG
,Author="Howard Schwartz"
,Title="Going Global"
,Journal="Web Techniques"
,Volume=5 ,Number=9 ,Month=sep ,Year=2000
,Pages=54#"--"#57
,Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors} $\bullet$ \K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Article{Yu:SiC
,Author="John Yunker"
,Title="Speaking in Charsets"
,Journal="Web Techniques"
,Volume=5 ,Number=9 ,Month=sep ,Year=2000
,Pages=59#"--"#63
,Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors} $\bullet$ \K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Article{DrU:LLF
,Author="{Dr. Usability}"
,Title="Lost in the localization forest"
,Journal = int ,Volume = 13, Number = 3, Month=may#" + "#jun ,Year = 2006
,Pages=8
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1125864.1125872"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors} $\bullet$ \K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Article{Ch:WMTAS
,Title="The Washing Maching That Ate My Sari --- Mistakes in
Cross-Cultural Design"
,Author="Apala Lahiri Chavan and Douglas Gorney and Beena Prabhu
and Sarit Arora"
,Journal=int ,Volume="XVI" ,Number=1 ,Month=jan#" +"#feb ,Year=2009
,Pages=26#"--"#31
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1456202.1456209"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors}"
}
@Article{La:DSFL
,Title="Designing Senior-Friendly Living, or Why Doesn't My Cable Work?"
,Author="Jonathan Lazar"
,Journal=int ,Volume="XVI" ,Number=1 ,Month=jan#" +"#feb ,Year=2009
,Pages=32#"--"#34
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1456202.1456210"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors}"
}
@Article{De:FY
,Author="Paul Dempsey"
,Title="Find Yourself"
,Journal="Web Techniques"
,Volume=5 ,Number=9 ,Month=sep ,Year=2000
,Pages="72, 74, 76--77"
,Keywords="\K{navigation} $\bullet$ \K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Article{Sc:RR
,Author="Randal L. Schwartz "
,Title="Ravaged by Robots"
,Journal="Web Techniques"
,Volume=6 ,Number=12 ,Month=dec ,Year=2001
,Pages=42#"--"#43
,Keywords="\K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
,Abstract="Using images to foil robot form submission"
}
@Article{Ch:CDOBC,
Title="Cultural differences in the online behavior of consumers",
Author="Patrick Y. K. Chau and Melissa Cole and Anne P. Massey and
Mitzi Montoya-Weiss and Robert M. O'Keefe",
Journal=cacm, Volume=45, Number=10, Year=2002, Month=oct,
Pages=138 # "--" # 143,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/570907.570911",
Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors}",
}
@Article{Bl:ADHT99,
Author="James Blustein and Luis Fransisco-Revilla",
Title="Panel: Adaptive Hypermedia",
Note="Trip report about Hypertext~'99~\cite{HT99} conference panel",
Journal="{sigWeb} Newsletter", Volume=8, Number=2, Month=jun, Year=1999,
Pages=51 # "--" # 53,
Keyword="\K{HT!adaptive hypermedia}"
}
@Article{Ed:PIKII
,Author="K. Andrew Edmonds and James Blustein and Don Turnbull"
,Title="A Personal Information \& Knowledge Infrastructure Integrator"
,Journal=JoDI ,Volume=5 ,Number=1 ,Year=2004
,Note="Article number 243, 2004-05-12"
,SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Wireless Location Privacy Protection \cite{Sc:WLPP}
\item Welcome to the mobile life! (about ubicomp) \cite{Ho:WML}
\end{itemize}"
}
@InProceedings{Br:DSICWL,
Author="Barry A. T. Brown and Abigail J. Sellen and Kenton P. O'Hara",
Title="A Diary Study of Information Capture in Working Life",
BookTitle=SIGCHI2K, CROSSREF="CHI2K", Pages=438 # "--" # 445,
SeeAlso="Other Kenton O'Hara papers~\cite{OH:CRPOLD,OH:SRULD}"
}
@Article{Li:IPRM,
Author="Ziming Liu and David G. Stork",
Title="Is Paperless Really More? Rethinking the role of paper in the
digital age",
Journal=cacm, Volume=43, Number=11, Month=nov, Year=2000,
URL="http://www.acm.org/pubs/citations/journals/cacm/2000-43-11/p94-liu/",
Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Ch:TLH,
Author="Chaomei Chen and Les Carr",
Title="Trailblazing the Literature of Hypertext: Author Co-Citation
Analysis (1989--1998)",
Url="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/294469.294486",
BookTitle=HT99, CROSSREF="HT99", Pages=51 # "--" # 60
}
@Article{Zh:HMID,
Author="Erping Zhu",
Title="Hypermedia Interface Design: The Effects of Number of Links and
Granularity of Nodes",
Journal=JEHM, Year=1999, Volume=8, Number=3, Pages=331 # "--" # 358,
SeeAlso="Dee-Lucas and Larkin in same J. re HT
segmentation~\cite{DeLu:HTSGC}",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item (p.\,335) Jonassen \& Wang (1993): concluded that the
student ability rather than structure of HT influences
students' knowledge acquisition
\item (p.\,348) \# of links \& size of nodes had no effect on
searching,
\item (p.\,348) few links led to better learning (more like
familiar interface of paper) reference to cognitive load
theory,
\item (p.\,351) few links led to more positive attitude towards
HT doc and positive correlation with learning,
\item Suggestions for learning: few links and/or link filtering
\end{itemize}"
}
@Article{Li:EIIEIS,
Author="Kai H. Lim and Izak Benbasat and Peter A. Todd",
Title="An Experimental Investigation of the Interactive Effects of
Interface Style, Instructions, and Task Familiarity on User
Performance",
Journal=TOCHI, Volume=3, Number=1, Month=mar, Year=1996,
Pages=1 # "--" # 37,
Annote="direct manipulation interfaces, See Norman in Norman and
Draper~\cite{No:CogEng}"
}
@Article{Re:ELSTT,
Author="W. Michael Reed and David J. Ayersman and Lee A. Kraus",
Title="The Effects of Learning Style and Task Type on Hypermedia-Based
Mental Models",
Journal=JEHM, Volume=6, Number="3/4", Pages=285 # "--" # 304, Year=1997,
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item 6 of 8 citations are to self
\item Reed, Ayersman, \& Liu (1996) proposed 4~types of information
structures to cover all types of HM and how users' learning
experience might be structured.
\item uses Kolb's (1985) Learning Style Inventory
\item The experiments don't make sense to me --- the measures of
student answers especially
\end{itemize}",
SeeAlso="types of HT readers:\cite{Ca:CVPHT,La:DKIHN,Ki:SMDHB}",
Keyword="\K{taxonomy}"
}
@Article{La:DKIHN,
Author="Kimberly A. Lawless and Jonna M. Kulikowich",
Title="Domain Knowledge, Interest, and Hypertext Navigation: A Study of
Individual Differences",
Journal=JEHM, Volume=7, Number=1, Year=1998, Pages=51 # "--" # 69,
Annote="$n=61$, btwn~S design, suggestions: nature of domain can affect
(well-structured vs. not structured), student of developmental
differences among readers",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item types of HT readers:\cite{Ca:CVPHT,Re:ELSTT,Ki:SMDHB},
\item Dee-Lucas's HT segmentation~\cite{DeLu:HTSGC}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{taxonomy} $\bullet$ \K{Expertise}"
}
@Article{Ca:CVPHT,
Author="Carlo Castelli and Luigi Colazzo and Andrea Molinari",
Title="Cognitive Variables and Patterns of Hypertext Performances:
Lessons Learned for Educational Hypermedia Construction",
Journal=JEHM, Volume=7, Number="2/3", Pages=177 # "--" # 206,
Year=1998,
Annote="$n=15$, Seven possible types of HT user, performance
assumptions: should read node once only but would these authors
expect the same out of book readers?",
SeeAlso="types of HT readers:\cite{La:DKIHN,Re:ELSTT,Ki:SMDHB}",
Keyword="\K{taxonomy} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Article{Ho:CESOHT,
Author="Rijk Hofman and Herre {van Oostendorp}",
Title="Cognitive effects of a structural overview in a hypertext",
Journal="British Journal of Educational Technology", ISSN="007-1013",
Volume=30, Number=2, Pages=129 # "--" # 140, Month=apr, Year=1999,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-8535.00101",
SeeAlso="McDonald and Stevenson in JEHM~\cite{McD:SvCM} (also influenced
by Dee-Lucas)",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item
McNamara et al. found that a well-developed structure
improved the comprehension of readers with low prior
knowledge, but impaired comprehension of high prior knowledge
readers (cf. with spatial ability and success with HT)
\item
task and user characteristics are important
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability} $\bullet$
\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Article{McD:SvCM,
Author="Sharon McDonald and Rosemary J. Simpson",
Title="Spatial Versus Conceptual Maps as Learning Tools in Hypertext",
Journal=JEHM, Year=1999, Volume=8, Number=1, Pages=43 # "--" # 64,
SeeAlso="Hofman and van Oostendorp in BJET~\cite{Ho:CESOHT} (also
influenced by Dee-Lucas)",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item very interesting
\item spatial maps reduce confusion and help navigation but
reduce learning
\item conceptual maps facilitate learning but are not very
useful for navigation
\item (p.\,61) results suggest that non-map HT~$\to$ pure
discovery~$\to$ favours conceptual understanding not
factual understanding
\item `The difficulty with ht may arise because learners are
unable to focus on trying to integrate textual
information with their prior knowledge because they need
to be able to find their way around the text before
the[y] can construct an overall conceptual structure of
it.' Lack of a schema for guidance?
\item conceptual map is guidance which therefore reduces
cognitive load.
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability} $\bullet$
\K{Navigation}"
}
@Article{Mu:OIS,
Author="Kevin Mullet",
Title="Organizing Information Spatially",
Journal=int, month=jul, Year=1995,
Annote="layout, HCI:critique of a design as an example",
Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@Article{Bo:LGFVO,
Author="Frans Boselle",
Title="Local and Global Factors in Occlusion",
Journal="Perception", Year=1994, Volume=23, Pages=517 # "--" # 528,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{Wi:AVR,
Author="Earl L. Wiener",
Title="Application of Vigilance Research: Rare, Medium, or Well Done?",
Journal="Human Factors", Volume=29, Number=6, Pages= 725 # "--" # 736,
Year=1987,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{An:REM,
Author="John R. Anderson and Lael J. Schooler",
Title="Reflections of the Enviroment in Memory",
Journal="Psychological Science",
Volume=2, Number=6, Pages=396 # "--" # 408,
Year=1991, Month=nov,
Annote="full of inferences and assumptions, no proof of causality",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{Sm:STMPSS,
Author="Janan Al-Awar Smither",
Title="Short term memory demands in processing synthetic speech by old
and young adults",
Journal="Behaviour \& Information Technology",
Volume=12, Number=6, Pages=330 # "--" # 335,
Year=1993, ISSN="0144-929X",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{Si:DMLCL,
Author="Henry K. Simpson and James W. Pellegrino",
Title="Descriptive Models in Learning Command Languages",
Journal="Journal of Educational Psychology",
Volume=85, Number=3, Pages=539 # "--" # 550,
Year=1993,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{So:ToSU,
Author="Louise L. Soe and M. Lynne Markus",
Title="Technological or Social Utility? Unraveling Explanations of
Email, Vmail and Fax Use",
Journal="The Information Society",
Volume=9, Pages=213 # "--" # 236,
Year=1993,
SeeAlso="Kinnucan JASIS 43(1)~\cite{Ki:SRS}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{Ca:APSS,
Author="Richard A. Carlson and Boo Hock Khoo and Robin G. Yaure and
Walter Schneider",
Title="Acquisition of a Problem-Solving Skill: Levels of Organization
and Use of Working Memory",
Journal="Journal of Experimental Psychology: General", Year=1990,
Volume=119, Number=2, Pages=193 # "--" # 214,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{Ha:TEVMR,
Author="Shannon L. Halgreen and Nancy J. Cooke",
Title="Towards ecological validity in menu research",
Journal=IJMMS, Year=1993, Volume=39, Pages=51 # "--" # 70,
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Kiger on depth/breadth trade-off in IJMMS v.20~\cite{Ki:BDT} and
\item Larson and Czerwinski's work with webpages~\cite{La:WPD}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861} $\bullet$ \K{menus}"
}
@Article{F-S:LSCM,
Author="D. Feldman-Stewart and D.J.K. Mewhort",
Title="Learning in small connectionist networks does not generalize to
large networks",
Journal="Psychological Research", Year=1994,
Volume=56, Pages=99 # "--" # 103,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@InProceedings{Wi:SSBIG,
Author="Nicholas Wilde and Clayton Lewis",
Title="Spreadsheet-based interactive graphics: from prototype to tool",
BookTitle=SIGCHI90, CROSSREF="CHI90", Pages=153 # "--" # 159,
Year=1990,
}
@Article{Fr:SLES,
Author="David M. Frohlich and Paul Luff",
Title="Some Lessons From an Excercise in Specification",
Journal="Human Computer Interaction", ISSN="0737-0024?",
Volume=4, Year=1989, Pages=121 # "--" # 147,
Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@Article{Kl:DMSLFF,
Author="Gary A. Klein and Roberta Calderwood",
Title="Decision Models: Some Lessons From the Field",
Journal="{IEEE} Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics",
Volume=21, Number=5, Pages=1018 # "--" # 1026,
Year=1991, Month=sep #"/"# oct,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@InCollection{Be:PIA,
Author="H. Russell Bernard and Peter Killworth and David Kronenfeld and
Lee Sailer",
Title="The Problem of Informant Accuracy: The Validity of Retrospective
Data",
BookTitle="Annual Review of Anthropology", Pages=495 # "--" # 517,
Editor="Bernard J. Siegel", Publisher="Annual Reviews, Inc.",
Address="4139 El~Camino Way, Palo~Alto, {CA}, 94306, {USA}",
Year=1984, Volume=13,
CallNo="GN4.A558 v.13 1984", ISSN="0084-6570", ISBN="0-8243-1913-3",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{Da:EAMIDCL,
Author="Simon P. Davies and Anthony J. Lambert and John M. Findlay",
Title="The effects of the availability of menu information during
command learning in a word processing application",
Journal="Behaviour \& Information Technology",
Volume=8, Number=2, Pages=135 # "--" # 144,
Year=1989, ISSN="0144-929X",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861} $\bullet$ \K{menus}"
}
@InProceedings{Ca:MVWSI,
Author="Stuart K. Card and Henderson, Jr., Austin",
Title="A Multiple, Virtual-Workspace Interface to Support Task
Switching",
BookTitle="{CHI + GI}",
Pages=53 # "--" # 59,
Year=1987,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{Ki:SRS,
Author="Mark Kinnucan",
Title="The Size of Retrieval Sets",
Journal=JASIS, Volume=43, Number=1, Pages=72 # "--" # 79, Year=1992,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{GB:JP,
Author="Daryle Gardner-Bonneau",
Title="The Joy of \sout{Sex} Psychology",
Journal=int, month=jan # " + " # feb, Year=2001,
Volume="viii", Number=1, Pages=19 # "--" # 22,
Note="Appeared in `{the whiteboard}' column edited by Elizabeth Buie",
Annote="Promote Gibsonian ecological view of interfaces",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Landauer's `Relations between CogPsych and Computer System
Design'~\cite{La:RCCSD},
\item Bronowski's first chapter in `Science and Human
Values'~\cite{Br:TCM}, and
\item Cronbach's `The two disciplines of scientific
psychology'~\cite{Cr:2DSP}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Misc} $\bullet$ \K{Psych!intro}"
}
@Article{He:IEMIM,
Author="Paula Hertel",
Title="Implications of External Memory for Investigations of Mind",
Journal="Applied Cognitive Pschology", Volume=7, Pages=665 # "--" # 674,
Year=1993,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{Fa:S,
Author="Mohammad U. Farooq and Wayne D. Dominick",
Title="A survey of formal tools and models for developing user
interfaces",
Journal=IJMMS, Volume=29, Pages=479 # "--" # 496,
Year=1988,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861} $\bullet$ \K{Survey}"
}
@InCollection{La:RCCSD,
Author="Thomas K. Landauer",
Title="Relations between Cognitive Psychology and Computer System
Design",
BookTitle="Interfacing Thought: Cognitive Aspects of Human-Computer
Interaction",
Editor="John M. Carroll",
Chapter=1, Pages=1 # "--" # 25,
Publisher=MITp, Address="Cambridge, {MA}, {USA}",
Year=1987,
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Gardner-Bonneau's The Joy of Psychology~\cite{GB:JP},
\item Bronowski's first chapter in `Science and Human
Values'~\cite{Br:TCM}, and
\item Cronbach's `The two disciplines of scientific
psychology'~\cite{Cr:2DSP}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861} $\bullet$ \K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Misc} $\bullet$
\K{Psych!intro}"
}
@Article{Ho:MPUT,
Author="Patrick A. Holleran",
Title="A methodological note on pitfalls in usability testing",
Journal="Behaviour \& Information Technology",
Volume=10, Number=5, Pages=345 # "--" #357, Year=1991,
SeeAlso="\cite{Sm:LBFT,Je:UIERW}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861} $\bullet$ \K{Testing}"
}
@Article{Sm:LBFT,
Author="Elissa D. Smilowitz and Michael J. Darnell and Alan E. Benson",
Title="Are we overlooking some usability testing methods? A comparison
of lab, beta, and forum tests",
Journal="Behaviour \& Information Technology",
Volume=13, Number="1 and 2", Pages=183 # "--" # 190 , Year=1994,
SeeAlso="\cite{Ho:MPUT,Je:UIERW,Po:OOIDD}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861} $\bullet$ \K{Testing}"
}
@InCollection{Br:TCM,
Author="J. Bronowski",
Title="The Creative Mind",
BookTitle="Science and Human Values",
Chapter=1, Pages=11 # "--" # 30 # ", " # 83 # "--" # 89,
Publisher="Penguin Books (by arrangement with Hutchinson of London)",
Year=1965,
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Gardner-Bonneau's The Joy of Psychology~\cite{GB:JP},
\item Landauer's `Relations between CogPsych and Computer System
Design'~\cite{La:RCCSD}, and
\item Cronbach's `The two disciplines of scientific
psychology'~\cite{Cr:2DSP}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@Article{Cr:2DSP,
Author="Lee J. Cronbach",
Title="The Two Disciplines of Scientific Pschology",
Journal="American Psychologist",
Volume=12, Pages=671 # "--" # 684,
Year=1957,
Note="Address of the President at the Sixty-Fifth Annual Convention of
the American Psychological Association, 1957. Available online at
\url{http://www.yorku.ca/dept/psych/classics/Cronbach/Disciplines/}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Gardner-Bonneau's The Joy of Psychology~\cite{GB:JP},
\item Landauer's `Relations between CogPsych and Computer System
Design'~\cite{La:RCCSD}, and
\item Bronowski's first chapter in `Science and Human
Values'~\cite{Br:TCM}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@InProceedings{Je:UIERW,
Author="Robin Jeffries and James R. Miller and Cathleen Wharton and
Kathy M. Uyeda",
Title="User Interface Evaluation in the Real World: A Comparison of Four
Techniques",
BookTitle=SIGCHI91, CROSSREF="CHI91",
Pages=119 # "--" # 124,
Year=1991,
SeeAlso="\cite{Ho:MPUT,Sm:LBFT,Po:OOIDD}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation}"
}
@Article{La:UME,
Author="Mark Lansdale and Ernest Edmonds",
Title="Using Memory for events in the design of personal filing systems",
Journal=IJMMS, Volume=36, Number=1, Pages=97 # "--" #126,
Year=1992,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability}(?) $\bullet$
\K{System!MEMOIRS}"
}
@InCollection{Ch:RET,
Author="Roger Chaffin and Douglas J. Herrmann",
Title="Relation Element Theory: A New Account of the Representation and
Processing of Semantic Relations",
BookTitle="Memory and Learning: The Ebbinghaus Centennial Conference",
Editor="David S. Gorfein and Robert R. Hoffman",
Chapter=14, Pages=221# "--" #245,
Publisher="Lawrence Erlbaum Associates", Year=1987,
Address="Hillsdale, {NJ}, {USA}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861}"
}
@InCollection{Bo:CMHCI,
Author="Paul A. Booth and Gill M. Brown",
Title="Cognitive Models in Human-Computer Interaction",
Chapter=4, Pages=65 # "--" #101,
BookTitle="An Introduction to Human-Computer Interaction",
CROSSREF="Bo:IHCI", Note="Includes annotated bibliography",
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Cognitive model} $\bullet$ \K{Review}"
}
@InCollection{Bo:UHCI,
Author="Paul A. Booth and Chris J. Marshall",
Title="Usability in Human-Computer Interaction",
Chapter=5, Pages=103 # "--" #136,
BookTitle="An Introduction to Human-Computer Interaction",
CROSSREF="Bo:IHCI", Note="Includes annotated bibliography",
Annote="Definition of Usability should be considered as prep for HCI
classes",
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Review}"
}
@InCollection{No:CogEng,
Author="Donald A. Norman",
Title="Cognitive Engineering",
Chapter=3, Pages= 31# "--" #61,
BookTitle="User Centered System Design: New Perspectives on Human-Computer
Interaction",
CROSSREF="No:UCSD",
Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@InCollection{Hu:DMI,
Author="Edwin L. Hutchins and James D. Hollan and Donald A. Norman",
Title="Direct Manipulation Interfaces",
Chapter=5, Pages=87# "--" #124,
BookTitle="User Centered System Design: New Perspectives on
Human-Computer Interaction",
CROSSREF="No:UCSD",
Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@Article{Le:WDR,
Author="Jintae Lee and Kum-Yew Lai",
Title="What's in Design Rationale?",
Journal="Human-Computer Interaction", Volume=6, Year=1991,
Pages=251 #"--"# 280,
}
@Article{Po:OOIDD,
Author="Steven E. Poltrock and Jonathan Grudin",
Title="Organizational Obstacles to Interface Design and Develpment:
Two Participant-Observer Studies",
Journal=TOCHI, Month=mar, Year=1994,
Volume=1, Number=1, Pages=52 #"--"#80,
SeeAlso="\cite{Ho:MPUT,Sm:LBFT,Po:OOIDD,Je:UIERW}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych!LIS\,861} $\bullet$ \K{Testing}"
}
@Article{Co:EM,
Author="Larry L. Constantine",
Title="Essential Modelling: Use Cases User Interfaces",
Journal=int, Month=apr, Year=1995, Pages=34#"--"#46,
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Design}"
}
@Article{Wi:PUT,
Author="Daniel Wildman",
Title="Getting the Most from Paired-User Testing",
Journal=int, Month=jul, Year=1995, Pages=21#"--"#27,
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Testing}"
}
@Article{Ki:SMDHB,
Author="Hanhwe Kim and Stephen C. Hirtle",
Title="Spatial Metaphors and Disorientation in Hypertext Browsing",
Journal="Behaviour \& Information Technology", Year=1995,
Volume=14, Number=4, Pages=239 #"--"# 250,
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item suggests types of user/searcher strategies and methods
of organizing using spatial metaphors,
\item suggests three type of problems with HT:
\begin{itemize}
\item embedded task
\item navigational
\item lack of recall for detail
\end{itemize}
all related to cognitive overload
\item p.\,247 menu types (cites experiments)
\end{itemize}",
SeeAlso="types of HT readers:\cite{La:DKIHN,Re:ELSTT,Ca:CVPHT}",
Keyword="\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability} $\bullet$
\K{taxonomy} $\bullet$ \K{menus} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation}"
}
@Article{He:SaDS
,Author="Mary Hegarty and Daniel R. Montello and Anthony
E. Richardson and Toru Ishikawa and Kristin Lovelace"
,Title="Spatial abilities at different scales: Individual
differences in aptitude-test performance and spatial-layout
learning"
,Journal="Intelligence" ,Volume=34 ,Pages=151#"--"#176
,Year=2005
,Annote="Abstract:
\begin{quotation}
Most psychometric tests of spatial ability are paper-and-pencil
tasks at the ``figural'' scale of space, in that they involve
inspecting, imagining or mentally transforming small shapes or
manipulable objects. Environmental spatial tasks, such as
wayfinding or learning the layout of a building or city, are
carried out in larger spaces that surround the body and involve
integration of the sequence of views that change with one's
movement in the environment. In a correlational study, 221
participants were tested on psychometric measures of spatial
abilities, spatial updating, verbal abilities and working
memory. They also learned the layout of large environments from
direct experience walking through a real environment, and via two
different media: a desktop virtual environment (VE) and a
videotape of a walk through an environment. In an exploratory
factor analysis, measures of environmental learning from direct
experience defined a separate factor from measures of learning
based on VE and video media. In structural-equation models,
smallscale spatial abilities predicted performance on the
environmental-learning tasks, but were more predictive of
learning from media than from direct experience. The results
indicate that spatial abilities at different scales of space are
partially but not totally dissociated. They specify the degree
of overlap between small-scale and large-scale spatial abilities,
inform theories of sex differences in these abilities, and
provide new insights about what these abilities have in common
and how they differ.
\end{quotation}"
,URL="dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2005.09.005"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation}"
}
@Article{Gu:IIAA,
Author="Shelley Gullikson and Ruth Blades and Marc Bragdon and Shelley
McKibbon and Marnie Sparling and Elaine G. Toms",
Title="The impact of information architecture on academic web site
usability",
Journal="The Electronic Library", Month=oct, Year=1999,
Volume=17, Number=5, Pages=293 #"--"# 304,
Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Testing} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW}"
}
@InProceedings{Sc:ANPLSL,
Author="Jean Scholtz and Susan Wiedenbeck",
Title="An analysis of novice programmers learning a second language",
BookTitle="Empirical Studies of Programmers: Fifth Workshop",
Month="3--5 "#dec, Year=1993, Address="Palo Alto, {CA}, {USA}",
Pages=187#"--"#205,
Editor="Curtis R. Cook and Jean C. Scholtz and James C. Spohrer",
Publisher="Ablex Publishing Corporation",
ISBN="1-56750-088-9(cl.) / 1-56750-089-7(ppb.)",
CallNo="QA76.6.W688 1993",
SeeAlso="IJHCCI 2(1):51--71 (1990)\cite{Sc:LSSPL}"
}
@Article{Sc:LSSPL,
Author="Jean Scholtz and Susan Wiedenbeck",
Title="Learning Second and Subsequent Programming Languages: A Problem
of Transfer",
Journal="International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction",
Volume=2, Number=1, Pages=51 #"--"# 71, Year=1990
,Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@Article{Sa:EISPHM,
Author="Michail Salampasis and John Tait and Chris Bloor",
Title="Evaluation of information-seeking performance in hypermedia
digital libraries",
Journal="Interacting with Computers", Volume=10, Number=3, Year=1998,
ISSN="0-53-5438",
Keyword="\K{Information Retrieval} $\bullet$
\K{Information Retrieval!evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Browsing},
\K{Evaluation!Information Retrieval} $\bullet$
\K{information seeking}",
Annote="selecting related docs from a collection",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Similar work and major citations:
\begin{itemize}
\item Botafogo's measures~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics},
\item Jean's book~\cite{Jean'sBook},
\item Browsing chapter in ARIST 1993~\cite{Ch:Browsing}
\item Bernard's PhD thesis~\cite{Be:MLBernard}
\end{itemize}
\item Related work
\begin{itemize}
\item Nick Belkin's ASK model (from 1980?)
\item McE~\cite{McE:HT99,McE:HT2K}
\end{itemize}
\end{itemize}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:SCPS,
Author="Hannes Marais and Krishna Bharat",
Title="Supporting Cooperative and Personal Surfing with a Desktop
Assistant",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the 10th annual ACM symposium on User
interface software and technology",
Year=1997, Pages=129 #"--"# 138,
Address="Banff, Alberta, Canada",
Annote="(1)~shared annotations,
(2)~annotations not tied to location in a document (because they
found shared annotations don't work this way),
(3)~searching aid, on-the-fly full-text indexing",
Keyword="\K{System!Browserware} $\bullet$ \K{annotation} $\bullet$
\K{System!Vistabar/Webmark} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW} $\bullet$
\K{System!Alta Vista} $\bullet$ \K{Bloom Filters}"
}
@InProceedings{He:EBP,
Author="Harold Henke",
Title="Are Electrons Better Than Papyrus? (Or Can Adobe Acrobat Reader
Files Replace Hardcopy?)",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the sixteenth annual international
conference on Computer documentation",
Address="Quebec, Quebec, Canada",
Year=1998, Pages=29 #"--"#37,
Keyword="\K{interface}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:MWSWB,
Author="Paul P. Maglio and Teenie Matlock",
Title="Metaphors We Surf the Web By",
BookTitle="Workshop on Personalized and Social Navigation in Information
Space",
Year=1998, Address="Stockholm, Sweden",
Note="Downloaded from
\url{http://www.almaden.ibm.com/cs/people/pmaglio/pubs/meta4surf.ps}",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InCollection{Ma:CSIS,
Author="Paul P. Maglio and Teenie Matlock",
Title="The Conceptual Structure of Information Space",
BookTitle="Social navigation of information space",
Chapter=9, Pages=155#"--"#173,
Editor="Alan J. Munro and Kristina H{\"{o}}{\"{o}}k and David Benyon",
Year=1999, Publisher="Springer Verlag",
Note="
(1)~Downloaded from
\url{http://faculty.ucmerced.edu/tmatlock/papers/maglio-matlock.pdf}
(2)~Reprinted (as Ch.\,16) in Designing information spaces: The social
navigation approach. H{\"{o}}{\"{o}}k, Benyon, and Munro (eds.),
2003",
Annote="
\begin{description}
\item[p.\,156] `we argue that (a)~the particular language people
use is based on conceptual metaphor and is motivated by
basic image schemata, which emerge from natural embodied
experience (e.g. [8, 9]); and (b)~ web users' experience is
structured by conceptual integration [10--13]'.
\item[p.\,157] `Sentences in which the web user was viewed as an
agent, actively moving along a horizontal path, were rated
as significantly more sensible than those in which the web
user moved up or down, and as significantly more sensible
than those in which the web user was passive.'
\item[p.\,164--165] `Overall, all web users reported a similar
experience while using the web. Both beginners and experts
talked about their experiences as if they had been moving
from place to place although in fact they had not gone
anywhere. The data also revealed noticable differences
between experts and beginners. Beginners more often mixed
in their experiences using the keyboard, mouse, and other
elements of the physical (non-web) domain (e.g. ``I clicked
on \ldots'' or ``I typed in \ldots''), whereas experienced
users did not.]
\item[p.\,165 (\S9.3.1)] `Our data suggest that web users ---
even those who had never used the web --- view web activity
as traversal along paths. In particular, participants most
often see themselves as the agent, initiating and actively
moving along these paths (even for beginners; see
Table~9.3). According to the data, less often is the user
viewed as the passive recipient of information or as a
passenger being transported in some sort of web vehicle.'
\end{description}",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability} "
}
@Article{Ke:TDGHM,
Author="B. Kemp and K. Buckner",
Title="A taxonomy of design guidance for hypermedia design",
Journal="Interacting with Computers",
Volume=12, Number=2, Pages=143 #"--"# 160, Year=1999,
ISSN="0953-5438",
SeeAlso="SUE~\cite{Ga:SMHMUE}",
Keyword="\K{Design} $\bullet$ \K{Survey}"
}
@Article{Ga:SMHMUE,
Author="F. Garzotto and M. Matera",
Title="A Systematic Method for Hypermedia Usability Inspection",
Journal=NRHM, Volume=3, Year=1997, Pages=39 #"--"#65,
Keyword="\K{Design} $\bullet$ \K{System!SUE}"
@InProceedings{Wi:RDHMDL,
Author="Uffe K. Wiil and David L. Hicks",
Title="Requirements for Development of Hypermedia Technology for a
Digital Library Supporting Scholarly Work",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the 2000 ACM Symposium on Applied
Computing",
Month="19--21~"#mar, Year=2000, Address="Como, Italy", Volume=2,
Pages=607 #"--"#609,
Keyword="\K{HyNIC} $\bullet$ \K{System!HyTech} $\bullet$ \K{DL}"
}
@InProceedings{Ph:MvA,
Author="Thomas A. Phelps and Robert Wilensky",
Title="Multivalent Annotations",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the First European Conference on Research and
Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries",
Date="1--3~"#sept, Year=1997, Address="Pisa, Italy",
URL="http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~phelps/papers/mvd-edl97.ps.gz",
Keyword="\K{System!Multivalent Document} $\bullet$ \K{interface}
$\bullet$ \K{annotation}",
}
@Article{McD:NiH,
Author="Sharon McDonald and Rosemary J. Stevenson",
Journal="Interacting with Computers", Volume=10, Number=2,
Pages=129#"--"#142,
Year=1998, Month=may,
Title="Navigation in hyperspace: An evaluation of the effects of
navigational tools and subject matter expertise on browsing and
information retrieval in hypertext",
Annote="\begin{description}
\item[Abstract] \begin{quotation}\noindent
This study examined the effectiveness of a map and a textual
contents list on the navigation performance of subjects with
and without prior knowledge of the text topic. After reading
the text, subjects used the document to answer ten
questions. The results showed that performance in the map
condition was superior to that of the contents list condition,
which in turn was superior to that of the hypertext only
condition (no navigational aid). In addition, knowledgeable
subjects performed better than non-knowledgeable subjects,
except in the map condition where their performance was
equivalent. The results also show that non-knowledgeable users
tend to rely more heavily on navigational aids than
knowledgeable users, and that aids were used primarily during
browsing. These results are discussed in relation to the ways
in which navigational aids interact with the prior knowledge of
the user to enhance or impede performance.
\end{quotation}
\item[Main results] \begin{itemize}\item[]
\item domain experts (McD\&S call them `knowledgeable
users') took less time
\item map users refered to it more frequently
\item non-experts used aids more than experts
\item disorientation effects measured in post-trial questionnaire
\item maps seem to be most helpful when learning a space
\item maps seem to eliminate differences betwen experts and
non-experts
\item non-experts opened more nodes (some repeatedly implies
disorientation)
\end{itemize}
\item[Problems] \begin{itemize}\item[]
\item Within Ss design (ignores indiv. diffs)
\item Training by reading only so first use is in trial
\item Answers to questions scored yes/no
\item We don't know how they were scored or by whom
\end{itemize}
\item[Other] \begin{itemize}\item[]
\item text written by Stevenson, links (hypercard) made by
McD\&S
\item links by keyword or text button
\item $45$ cards, $4500$ word document
\item $n=36$ in $2\times 3$ groups (experts/non-$\times 3$
treatments (links,links+ToC,links+map?) so is $n$ really
$6$?)
\end{itemize}
\end{description}",
Keyword="\K{Expertise} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation}"
}
@Article{Ra:PPBGPFTS,
Author="M. V. Ramakrishna",
Title="Practical Performance Of Bloom Filters and Parallel Free-Text
Searching",
Journal=cacm, Month=oct, Year=1989, Volume=32, Number=10,
Pages=1237 #"--"#1239,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/67933.67941",
Keyword="\K{Bloom Filters}"
}
@Article{El:MUE,
Author="Pamela Ellis and Steve Ellis",
Title="Measuring User Experience",
Journal="Web Techniques", ISSN="1086-556X",
Volume=6, Number=2, Month=feb, Year=2001, Pages=29 #"--"# 31,
SeeAlso="advice from Don Norman about focus groups~\cite[pp.\,?]{No:IC}",
Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!Intro}"
}
@Article{Ha:SAECA,
Title="Spatial Abilities and the Effects of Computer Animation on
Short-Term and Long-Term Comprehension",
Author="Timothy A. Hays",
Journal="Journal of Educational Computing Research", Year=1996,
Volume=14, Number=2, Pages=139 #"--"#157,
ISSN="0735-6331",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Th:HC,
Title="Hypermedia and Cognition: Designing for Comprehension",
Author="Manfred Th{\"u}ring and J{\"o}rg Hannemann and J{\"o}rg
M. Haake",
Journal=cacm, Volume=38, Number=8, Month=aug, Year=1995,
Pages=57#"--"#66,
Keyword="\K{System!SEPIA}"
}
@Article{Ro:WWRMLP,
Author="Daniel H. Robinson and Sheri L. Robinson and Andrew
D. Katayama",
Title="When Words Are Represented in Memory Like Pictures: Evidence for
Spatial Encoding of Study Materials",
Journal="Contemporary Educational Psychology", Volume=24, Year=1999,
Pages=38#"--"#54,
Note="Article ID ceps.1998.0979, available online at
\url{http://www.idealibrary.com}",
Annote="Paivio (1986)",
SeeAlso="Dee-Lucas~\cite{DL:LET}",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@InCollection{Fr:IISRS,
Title="Introduction to Information Storage and Retrieval Systems",
Author="W.~B. Frakes",
CROSSREF="Fr:IRDSnA", Chapter=1, Pages=1#"--"#12,
BookTitle="Information Retrieval Data Structures \&
Algorithms"
}
@InCollection{RhetoricalHT,
Author="George P. Landow",
Title="The Rhetoric of Hypermedia: Some Rules for Authors",
BookTitle="Hypermedia and Literary Studies",
Pages=81#"--"#103,
Editor="Paul Delany and George P. Landow",
Publisher=MITp, Year=1991,
Annote="Reviewed in Computing Reviews~\cite{vanD:HTRevII}",
CallNo="PN98.E4 H97 1991"
}
@InCollection{WritingHT,
Author="Nicole Yankelovich and Norman Meyrowitz and Andries van
Dam",
Title="Reading and Writing the Electronic Book",
BookTitle="Hypermedia and Literary Studies",
Editor="Paul Delany and George P. Landow",
Publisher=MITp, Year=1991,
Pages=53#"--"#79,
SeeAlso="From Electronic Books to Electronic Libraries: Revisiting
`Reading and Writing the Electronic Book'~\cite{RevisitingWHT}",
Annote="Reviewed in Computing Reviews~\cite{vanD:HTRevII}",
CallNo="PN98.E4 H97 1991"
}
@InCollection{RevisitingWHT,
Author="Nicole Yankelovich",
Title="From Electronic Books to Electronic Libraries: Revisiting
`Reading and Writing the Electronic Book'",
BookTitle="Hypermedia and Literary Studies",
Pages=133#"--"#141,
Editor="Paul Delany and George P. Landow",
Publisher=MITp, Year=1991,
SeeAlso="Reading and Writing the Electronic Book~\cite{WritingHT}",
Annote="Reviewed in Computing Reviews\cite{vanD:HTRevII}",
CallNo="PN98.E4 H97 1991"
}
@InCollection{TopWrit,
Author="Jay David Bolter",
Title="Topographic Writing: Hypertext and the Electronic Writing
Space",
BookTitle="Hypermedia and Literary Studies",
Pages=105#"--"#118,
Editor="Paul Delany and George P. Landow",
Publisher=MITp, Year=1991,
SeeAlso="Reading and Writing The Electronic Book~\cite{WritingHT}",
Annote="Reviewed in Computing Reviews\cite{vanD:HTRevII}",
CallNo="PN98.E4 H97 1991"
}
@Article{Ch:IDVEO,
Author="Chaomei Chen and Mary Czerwinski and Robert Macredie",
Title="Individual Differences in Virtual Environments --- Introduction
and Overview",
Annote="Introduction to a special issue~\cite{JASIS:Apr00}",
Journal=jasis, Volume=51, Number=6, Pages=499#"--"#507,
Month=apr, Year=2000,
Keyword="\K{individual differences} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Al:IDCUCD,
Author="Bryce Allen",
Title="Individual Differences and the Conundrums of User-Centered
Design: Two Experiments",
Journal=jasis, Volume=51, Number=6, Month=apr, Year=2000,
Pages=508#"--"#520,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-4571(2000)51:6<508::AID-ASI3>3.0.CO;2-Q",
SeeAlso="Notes on conference version \cite{Br:IFRIS}",
Keyword="\K{individual differences}"
}
@Article{Di:SSHUDSIS,
Author="Andrew Dillon",
Title="Spatial-Semantics: How Users Derive Shape from Information
Space",
Journal=jasis, Volume=51, Number=6, Month=apr, Year=2000,
Pages=521#"--"#528,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-4571(2000)51:6<521::AID-ASI4>3.0.CO;2-5",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item pp.\,521, 526: usability can be measured
\begin{description}
\item[by time] efficiency
\item[output cost] effectiveness
\item[affective cost] satisfaction
\end{description}
\item p.\,523: `early data from several studies which suggest that
landmark, route, and survey knowledge are each best suited to
different types of tasks' (cites Thorndyke \& Hayes-Roth,
1982)
\item p.\,523: shape defined (with reference to Dillon \& Schaap,
1996) as `\ldots notion of information possessing shape (those
spatial-semantic properties that convey coherence) that users
can exploit both semantically and physically to gather
meaning.' (Cf. p.\,525 ref to van D. \& K.)
\item p.\,523: `when asked to describe an information space after
interaction, users employ terms that convey relationships and
elaborations as well as purely spatial linkages such as
position and sequence \ldots{} it makes best sense to think of
the user's model of information space as being constructed out
of both.'
\item p.\,525: `If, as van Dijk and Kintsch (1983) have long argued,
information has a form that reflects its community's
practices, we may find that designing the information space to
take account of the shaping process has commensurate benefits
in training new practitioners in a discipline to construct
meaning.'
\item p.\,526 $2^{\mbox{nd}}$~last \P: basic advice for structure to
help novices (from the HT research with ref to Chen \&
Czerwinksi~\cite{Ch:Spat})
\item p.\,527: `\ldots Only then can we more the field beyond
designing for usability to designing for augmentation.'
\end{itemize}",
SeeAlso="\begin{description}
\item[history]
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item Dillon et al.~\cite{Di:HFE-J} was about an experiment
(with non-experts) reading journal articles. A major
conclusion was that human cognition involves
integration of information beyond the sentence level.
\item Dillon \& Schaap~\cite{Di:EPSI} followed-up that
study using experts.
\end{itemize}
\item[field (in-)dependence]
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item B. Allen in DL98 \cite{Br:IFRIS} and JASIS
\cite{Al:IDCUCD}
\item Charney \cite[pp.\,252, 262]{Ch:EoH}
\item Dillon \& Watson in IJHCS v.45
\cite[p.\,627]{Di:UAinHCI}
\item Dillon in JASIS 51(6) \cite{Di:SSHUDSIS}
\item N. Ford's {\itshape Cognitive Styles and Virtual
Environments} also in JASIS 51(6) \cite{Fo:CSVE}
\item Jennings et al. in CogErg91 \cite{Je:ASDBI}
\end{itemize}
\end{description}",
Keyword="\K{individual differences} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation} $\bullet$
\K{Classic} $\bullet$ \K{Info Shape}",
}
@Article{Fo:CSVE,
Author="Nigel Ford",
Title="Cognitive Styles and Virtual Environments",
Journal=jasis, Volume=51, Number=6, Month=apr, Year=2000,
Pages=543#"--"#557,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-4571(2000)51:6<543::AID-ASI6>3.0.CO;2-S",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item Abstract:
`Virtual environments enable a given information space to be
traversed in different ways by different individuals, using
different routes and navigation tools. However, we urgently need
robust user models to enable us to optimize the deployment of such
facilities. Research into individual differences suggests that the
notion of cognitive style may be useful in this process. Many such
styles have been identified. However, it is argued that Pask's
work on holist and serialist strategies and associated styles of
information processing are particularly promising in terms of the
development of adaptive information systems. These constructs are
reviewed, and their potential utility in ``real-world'' situations
assessed. Suggestions are made for ways in which they could be
used in the development of virtual environments capable of
optimizing the stylistic strengths and complementing the
weaknesses of individual users. The role of neural networks in
handling the essentially fuzzy nature of user models is
discussed. Neural networks may be useful in dynamically mapping
users' navigational behavior onto user models to enable them to
generate appropriate adaptive responses. However, their learning
capacity may also be particularly useful in the process of
improving system performance and in the cumulative development of
more robust user models.' (from BUBL~\cite{BUBL})
{}
\item Description from JASIS webpage
(\url{http://www.asis.org/Publications/JASIS/vol51n0600.html}):
{}
Nigel Ford's article focuses on the distinction between holists
and serialists in learning, and its implications for supporting
individual users through user interface design. Of particular
interest to the theme of this special issue, Ford addresses some
interesting behavioral patterns of holists and serialists. While
holists like to use concept maps, serialists prefer keyword
indices. A concept map, or the overview of an underlying
structure, is designed for global orientation regarding the
overall structure of the subject matter.
\\\indent
Having recognized the fuzzy nature of identifying individuals'
cognitive styles and learning strategies, Ford introduces a
modeling approach based on Kohonen self-organizing feature maps,
an artificial neural-network based classification technique. This
self-organized approach has potential as a possible route for
further research and development of adaptive virtual
environments. Virtual environments provide a wider framework for
integrating and directly manipulating global and analytic aspects
of an information space.
\\\indent
Ford's article also draws our attention to the connection
between field-dependence and cognitive styles in terms of
individuals' behavioral patterns in navigation of hyperspace. Like
holists, field-dependent individuals use overview maps more often
than field-independent individuals. In the next article, Palmquist
and Kim examine the effects of field-dependence in Web search.'
\end{itemize}",
SeeAlso="\begin{description}
\item[field (in-)dependence]
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item B. Allen in DL98 \cite{Br:IFRIS} and JASIS
\cite{Al:IDCUCD}
\item Charney \cite[pp.\,252, 262]{Ch:EoH}
\item Dillon \& Watson in IJHCS v.45
\cite[p.\,627]{Di:UAinHCI}
\item Dillon in JASIS 51(6) \cite{Di:SSHUDSIS}
\item N. Ford's {\itshape Cognitive Styles and Virtual
Environments} also in JASIS 51(6) \cite{Fo:CSVE}
\item Jennings et al. in CogErg91 \cite{Je:ASDBI}
\end{itemize}
\end{description}",
Keyword="\K{individual differences} $\bullet$ \K{Survey} $\bullet$
\K{HT!adaptive hypermedia} $\bullet$ \K{AI!neural networks}"
}
@Article{We:IDUCLM,
Title="Individual Differences in the Use of Command Line and Menu
Computer Interfaces",
Author="S. J. Westerman",
Journal="International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction",
Year=1997, Volume=9, Number=2, Pages=183#"--"#198,
Annote="Abstract: `This article presents an experimental investigation
of the process of computer-based command generation. The comparative
cognitive demands imposed by menu and command line interfaces are
examined in relation to individual differences in expertise and
cognitive ability. Three-way interactions between associative memory,
expertise, and command generation method indicated similarities in the
performance of expert participants with low associative memory and
that of novices. Spatial memory also interacted with expertise, with
novices with low spatial memory performing more poorly than any other
group. Implications for interface design are considered.' (Record
from HCIBIB
\url{http://hcibib.org/gs.cgi?word=checked&terms=J.IJHCI.9.2.183})",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item An experimental investigation of interface design
alternatives by Benbasat \& Todd~\cite{Be:IDA}
\item The effects of maps and textual information on navigation
in a desktop virtual environment by Schlender et
al.~\cite{Sc:MTINVD}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{menus} $\bullet$ \K{individual differences} $\bullet$
\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Be:AS
,author = "David Benyon and D. M. Murray"
,title = "Adaptive systems: From intelligent tutoring to autonomous
agents"
,journal = "Knowledge-Based Systems"
,volume = 6 ,number = 4 ,pages= 197#"--"#219
,year = 1993 ,month = dec
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0950-7051(93)90012-I"
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@InProceedings{Be:NISsti,
Author = "Benyon, David and H{\"{o}}{\"{o}}k, Kristina",
Title= "Navigation in information spaces: Supporting the individual",
BookTitle = {Proceedings of human-computer interaction: {INTERACT'97}},
Year = 1997,
Pages = 39 #"--"# 46,
Location = {London, England},
Publisher = {Chapman and Hall},
Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InProceedings{Be:NIS,
Title="Navigating Information Space",
Author="David Benyon",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the 1st {ERCIM} Workshop on 'User Interfaces
for All'",
CROSSREF="UI4ALL-95", Pages=16,
URL="http://ui4all.ics.forth.gr/UI4ALL-95/benyon.pdf",
Annote="Abstract: `The issue of how users can navigate their way through
large information spaces is one that is crucial to the ever expanding
and interlinking of computer systems. There are many ways of dealing
with the issue of navigation one of which is to provide different
dialogue styles to suit individual capabilities. The performance of
users was compared on a menu style interface to a database system,
which minimised navigation and constrained the dialogue, and a command
style interface, which allowed an open and flexible dialogue. The
results showed that some users did perform better on the interface
which minimised navigational issues, and some better on the more open
interface; and that users' performance related to their levels of
spatial ability and experience with using command style
interfaces. The menu interface proved suitable for users with both a
low spatial ability and low experience of using command style
interfaces. The command interface proved suitable for all users with a
high spatial ability, whatever their previous experience, and for
users with a low spatial ability but high experience of using command
style interfaces. The results of this small scale experiment have
potentially important ramifications for designers of interfaces to
large information spaces.'
Record from HCIBIB
\url{http://hcibib.org/gs.cgi?word=checked&terms=C.UI4ALL.95.5}",
SeeAlso="Accommodating Individual Differences in Searching a
Hierarchical File System~\cite{Vi:AIDSHFS}",
Keyword="\K{Navigation} $\bullet$ \K{individual differences} $\bullet$
\K{spatial ability}"
}
@InProceedings{Ac:AIDCSA,
Title="Abilities and Individual Differences in Complex Skill
Acquisition",
Author="Phillip L. Ackerman",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the Human Factors Society 36th Annual
Meeting", Volume=2,
Year=1992, Pages=921#"--"#925,
ISSN="0163-5182",
Annote="Abstract: `A theoretically-driven, information processing based
examination of ability-performance relations during the acquisition of
a high-fidelity complex air traffic controller simulation task is
described. Two laboratory experiments and one field experiment are
reviewed that describe the results of extensive ability testing
(including measures of general, reasoning, spatial, perceptual speed,
and perceptual/psychomotor abilities) and individual differences in
skill acquisition over protracted skill-learning sessions. Laboratory
studies examine individual differences in the acquisition of skills on
TRACON --- a Terminal Radar Approach Controller simulation. The field
investigation examines acquisition of skills by FAA Air Traffic
Controller Trainees. Results are reported from perspective of
global/component abilities, and global/component criterion task
performance measures. Results validate and further extend the Ackerman
(1988) theory of the cognitive ability determinants of individual
differences in skill acquisition. This research program demonstrates
the benefits of ability component and task component levels of
analysis over global analyses of ability-skill relations. Implications
are discussed for developing refined selection instruments for the
prediction of air traffic controller training success, and for other
job tasks with demands for inconsistent information processing, as
well as implications for design of tailored training procedures.'
(Record from HCIBIB
\url{http://hcibib.org/gs.cgi?word=checked&terms=C.HFS.92.921}",
Keyword="\K{individual differences}"
}
@Article{Vi:AIDSHFS,
Title="Accommodating Individual Differences in Searching a Hierarchical
File System",
Author="Kim J. Vicente and Robert C. Williges",
Journal=IJMMS, Year=1988, Volume=29, Number=6, Pages=647#"--"#668,
Month=dec,
Annote="Abstract: `Individual differences among users of a hierarchical
file system were investigated. The results of a previous experiment
revealed that subjects with low spatial ability were getting lost in
the hierarchical file structure. Based on the concept of visual
momentum, two changes to the old interface were proposed in an attempt
to accommodate the individual differences in task performance. The
changes consisted of a partial map of the hierarchy and an analogue
indicator of current file position. This experiment compared the
performance of users with high and low spatial abilities on the old
verbal interface and the new graphical interface. The graphical
interface resulted in changes in command usage that were consistent
with the predictions of the visual momentum analysis. Although these
changes in strategy resulted in a performance advantage for the
graphical interface, the relative performance difference between high
and low spatial groups remained constant across interfaces. However,
the new interface did result in a decrease in the within-group
variability in performance.'
(Record from HCIBIB
\url{http://hcibib.org/gs.cgi?word=checked&terms=J.IJMMS.29.6.647})",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Adapting Systems to Differences between
Individuals~\cite{Je:ASDBI}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{individual differences} $\bullet$ \K{menus} $\bullet$
\K{spatial ability}"
}
@InProceedings{Ca:PTPFGP,
Title="Are Personality Types and Psychometric Factors Good Predictors?",
Author="Raymond A. Carpenter and Ram R. Bishu and Michael W. Rile",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the Human Factors Society 34th Annual
Meeting",
Year=1990, Volume=1, Pages=351#"--"#355,
ISSN="0163-5182", CallNo="TA 166 H794",
Annote="Abstract: `The objective of this investigation was to
experimentally evaluate possible relationships among personality
types, selected psychometric factors, and categories of cognitive
activity, with an intent to develop user behavioral models for
interface design. Twenty subjects (10 novice and 10 experienced)
participated in an interactive scheduling task with two levels of task
complexity. The task involved navigation through ten action
alternatives, with each alternative being represented by a screen, to
allocate resources. The subjects were administered with Myers-Briggs
Type Indicator (MBTI) tests and a battery of psychometric
tests. Cognitive time, total number of menu selections, total number
of assignments, and the distribution of cognitive time into
intelligence, design and choice activities were the performance
measures. Variables derived from measurements of personality traits
and psychometric factors were evaluated as predictive measures of
performance. The personality trait for sensing/knowing was significant
in predicting overall performance, as were psychometric factors for
induction, integrative processing, and spatial scanning. The
personality trait of extrovert/introvert was found to be significant
in predicting the distribution of screen use times, as were derived
factors for locus of control, memory ability, and personality. These
results can form the basis for examining the usefulness of personality
types and psychometric factors as variables in models of user
characteristics.'
Record From HCIBIB
\url{http://hcibib.org/gs.cgi?word=checked&terms=C.HFS.90.351}",
Keyword="\K{individual differences}"
}
@Article{Ch:GSAPNS,
Author="Chaomei Chen",
Title="Generalised similarity analysis and pathfinder network scaling",
Journal="Interacting With Computers",
Volume=10, Number=2, Pages=107#"--"#128, Year=1998,
Annote="Abstract from
\url{http://www.elsevier.nl/gej-ng/10/23/72/14/11/11/abstract.html}:
`This paper introduces a generic approach to the development of
hypermedia information systems. This approach emphasises the role of
intrinsic inter-document relationships in structuring and visualising
a large hypermedia information space. In this paper, we illustrate the
use of this approach based on three types of similarity measurements:
hypertext linkage, content similarity and usage patterns. Salient
patterns in these relationships are extracted and visualised in a
simple and intuitive associated network. The spatial layout of a
visualisation is optimised such that closely related documents are
placed near to each other and only those intrinsic connections among
them are shown to users as automatically generated virtual links. This
approach supports self-organised information space transformation
based on usage patterns and other feedback such that the visual
structure of the information space is incrementally tailored to users'
search and browsing styles.'",
SeeAlso="Chen and Czerwinski in NRHM~\cite{Ch:Spat} and HT'99"
}
@Article{Ch:IDSSVE
,Author = "Chaomei Chen"
,Title = "Individual differences in a spatial-semantic virtual environment"
,Journal = JASIS ,volume = 51 ,number = 6
,Pages = 529 #"--"# 542
,Year = 2000
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-4571(2000)51:6<529::AID-ASI5>3.0.CO;2-F"
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InProceedings{Ge:NiH,
Author="Renee Gedge",
Title="Navigating in Hypermedia --- Interfaces and Individual
Differences",
BookTitle="Proceedings of {SITE}~97 Eighth International Conference of
the Society for Information Technology and Teacher Education
{(SITE)}",
Address="Orlando, Florida, {USA}", Month="1--5 "# apr, Year=1997,
URL="http://www.coe.uh.edu/insite/elec_pub/HTML1997/re_gedg.htm",
}
@Article{Sh:RVS,
Author="Simon Shum",
Title="Real and virtual spaces: mapping from spatial cognition to
hypertext",
Journal="Hypermedia",
Year=1990, Volume=2, Number=2, Pages=133#"--"#158,
Publisher="Taylor Graham",
URL="http://kmi.open.ac.uk/people/sbs/spatial/hypermedia90.html",
Note="The author's surname is given incorrectly. It should be
`Buckingham Shum'",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item Abstract:
`Parallels are frequently drawn between navigating through everyday
spatial environments and information systems, hypertexts being a
particular case in point. This paper examines the cognitive mapping
theory often borrowed implicitly from spatial cognition research,
which has a bearing on the appropriateness of using spatial imagery
in hypertext. Conceptual differences between euclidean and virtual
spaces are identified, and ways considered in which to make
information spaces more coherent. A demonstration hypertext browser
is described, incorporating some of the cognitive principles
discussed.'
\item survey about cognitive maps and spatial knowledge, 3D
interfaces/environments
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{Survey} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation}"
}
@Misc{Ho:DNAI,
Author="Kristina H{\"o\"o}k and Nils Dahlb{\"a}ck",
Title="Designing navigational aids for individuals",
Note="`Submitted to the workshop ``CHI 97 Workshop on Navigation in
Electronic Worlds'' to be held in Atlanta, March 23--24th'",
URL="http://www.sics.se/~kia/papers/navigation_ws.html"
}
@InCollection{McK:NTCIS,
Author="Cliff McKnight and Andrew Dillon and John Richardson",
Title="Navigation Through Complex Information Spaces",
BookTitle="Hypertext in Context", Chapter=4,
CROSSREF="HTinContext",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item landmarks vs. route knowledge
\item explain why cloze tests don't work with HT (see
Dillon's Readers' Models paper~\cite{Di:RMTS})
\item `memory for spatial location within in [sic] body of
text is reliable even if it is generally limited.'
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{Navigation} $\bullet$ \K{Survey} $\bullet$ \K{menus}"
}
@InCollection{Ga:IGDC,
BookTitle="Cognitive Psychology In and Out of the Laboratory",
Author="Kathleen M. Galotti",
Title="Individual and Gender Differences in Cognition",
Chapter=13, Pages=408#"--"#439,
Publisher="Brooks/Cole Publishing Company", Year=1994,
ISBN="0-534-21054-6", CallNo="BF 201 G35 1994",
Annote="\begin{description}
\item[meta-analyses] pp.\,423, 431 (see Hedges \&
Olkin~\cite{He:MA})
\item[visual-spatial abilities] pp. 425~-- 429
\item[expertise] p.\,437 has recommended readings
\end{description}",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}",
}
@Article{Li:ECSDSA,
Author="Marcia C. Linn and Anne C. Petersen",
Title="Emergence and Characterization of Sex Differences in Spatial
Ability: A Meta-Analysis",
Journal="Child Development", Volume=56, Number=6, Month=dec, Year=1985,
Pages=1479#"--"#1498,
Organization="the Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.",
Annote="From the abstract: `(b)~large sex differences are found only on
measures of mental rotation, (c)~that smaller sex differences are
found on measures of spatial perception'",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability}",
}
@Article{Hy:HLCGD,
Author="Janet Shibley Hyde",
Title="How Large Are Cognitive Gender Differences? A Meta-Analysis
Using $\omega^2$ and $d$",
Journal="American Psychologist",
Volume=36, Number=8, Month=aug, Year=1981, Pages=892#"--"#901,
Organization="the American Psychological Association, Inc.",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@InCollection{Gl:ONE,
Title="Overview",
Author="Robert Glaser and Michelene T.~H. Chi",
BookTitle="The Nature of Expertise", CROSSREF="Ch:NoE",
Pages="xv--xxviii",
Annote="",
SeeAlso="Other chapters in the same book~\cite{Po:INE,Jo:EDUU,Vo:SISP}",
Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@InCollection{Po:INE,
Title="Introduction: What is it to be an expert?",
Author="Michael I. Posner",
BookTitle="The Nature of Expertise", CROSSREF="Ch:NoE",
Pages="xxix--xxxvi",
Annote="",
SeeAlso="Other chapters in the same
book~\cite{Gl:ONE,Jo:EDUU,Vo:SISP}",
Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@InCollection{Jo:EDUU,
Title="Expertise and Decision Under Uncertainty: Performance and Process",
Author="Eric J. Johnson",
BookTitle="The Nature of Expertise", CROSSREF="Ch:NoE",
Pages=209#"--"#228, Chapter=7,
Annote="",
SeeAlso="Other chapters in the same
book~\cite{Gl:ONE,Po:INE,Vo:SISP}",
Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@InCollection{Vo:SISP,
Title="On The Solving of Ill-Structured Problems",
Author="James F. Voss and Timothy A. Post",
BookTitle="The Nature of Expertise", CROSSREF="Ch:NoE",
Pages=261#"--"#285, Chapter=9,
Annote="",
SeeAlso="Other chapters in the same
book~\cite{Gl:ONE,Po:INE,Jo:EDUU}",
Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@InCollection{Vo:HTII,
Author="Pawan R. Vora",
Title="Hypertext and its Implications for the Internet",
BookTitle="Handbook of Human-Computer Interaction",
CROSSREF="Ha:HHCI",
Pages=877#"--"#914, Chapter=38
}
@InCollection{Wo:HNTNTTMD,
Author="David D. Woods and Jennifer C. Watts",
Title="How Not to Have to Navigate Through Too Many Displays",
BookTitle="Handbook of Human-Computer Interaction",
CROSSREF="Ha:HHCI",
Pages=617#"--"#650, Chapter=26,
Keyword="\K{Navigation}"
}
@InCollection{Ma:FNE,
Author="Richard E. Mayer",
Title="From Novice to Expert",
BookTitle="Handbook of Human-Computer Interaction",
CROSSREF="Ha:HHCI",
Pages=781#"--"#795, Chapter=33,
Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@InBook{Ey:CogPsy4Read,
Author="Michael W. Eysenck and Mark T. Keane",
BookTitle="Cognitive Psychology: A Students's Handbook",
Publisher="Taylor \& Francis",
Edition="Fourth", Year=2000, ISBN="0-86377-551-9",
Chapter=12, Title="Language Comprehension", Pages=335#"--"#362,
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@Article{Ma:DLM,
Author="Catherine C. Marshall and Gene Golovchinsky and Morgan
N. Price",
Title="Digital Libraries and Mobility",
Journal=cacm, Volume=44, Number=5, Month=may, Year=2001,
URL="http://www.acm.org/pubs/citations/journals/cacm/2001-44-5/p55-marshall/",
Pages=55#"--"#56,
SeeAlso="Embodied User Interfaces for Really Direct
Manipulation~\cite{Fi:EUI}"
}
@InProceedings{Go:HTIR,
Author="Gene Golovchinsky and Catherine C. Marshall",
Title="Hypertext interaction revisited",
BookTitle=HT2K, CROSSREF="HT2K", Year=2000,
Pages=171#"--"#179,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/336296.336358"
}
@Article{Fi:EUI,
Author="Kenneth P. Fishkin and Anuj Gujar and Beverly L. Harrison and
Thomas P. Moran and Roy Want",
Title="Embodied User Interfaces for \emph{Really} Direct Manipulation",
Journal=cacm, Volume=43, Number=9, Month=sep, Year=2000,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/348941.348998",
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{annotation}"
}
@InCollection{Co:SA,
Author="Lynn A. Cooper and Randall J. Mumaw",
Title="Spatial Aptitude",
Pages=67#"--"#94,
CROSSREF="Di:IDC2",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@InCollection{Eg:IDLCS,
Author="Dennis E. Egan and Louis M. Gomez",
Title="Assaying, Isolating, and Accomodating Individual Differences in
Learning a Complex Skill",
Pages=174#"--"#218,
CROSSREF="Di:IDC2",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InCollection{Eg:IDIHCI
,Author = "Egan, D."
,Title = "Individual differences in human-computer interaction"
,BookTitle = "Handbook of Human-Computer Interaction"
,CROSSREF="Ha:HHCI"
,Pages = 543 #"--"# 568
,Year = 1998
,Publisher = "Elsevier Science Publishers"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InCollection{McH:HRC,
Author="Alec McHoul and Phil Roe",
Title="Hypertext and Reading Cognition",
Pages=347#"--"#359,
CROSSREF="Go:CTiSHI",
Annote="Conclusion is that hypertext (not hypermedia) is not different
from reading printed page except perhaps that it is faster (for
following links. [I think they are dead wrong.] They cite some
writings of George Landow several times as a proponent of the
hypertext-is-different camp. It might be interesting to compare their
view with Floridi's~\cite{Fl:pc} [with which I also disagree]."
}
@Article{Ba:AGHN,
Author="Gordon Paul Bary and Scott McRae and Peter Timmer",
Title="Against Generalising Hypermedia Navigation",
Journal="{HCI} Letters", Volume=1, Number=1, Pages=13#"--"#15,
Year=1998,
ISSN="1430-8630",
SeeAlso="I think Charney~\cite{Ch:EoH} wrote about similar studies",
Annote="Found that guided tour was better than hierarchy for grocery
shopping application"
}
@InProceedings{Sp:NumSs,
Author="Jared Spool and Will Schroeder",
Title="Testing Web Sites: Five Users Is Nowhere Near Enough",
BookTitle="Proceedings of the {SIGCHI} Conference on Human factors in
Computing Systems",
Year=2001,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/634067.634236",
SeeAlso="Nielsen's Estimating the number of Ss \ldots~\cite{Ni:NumUsers}",
Keyword="\K{heuristic}"
}
@Article{Zh:AEUCMM,
Author="Ziangmin Zhang and Mark Chignell",
Title="Assessment of the Effects of User Characteristics on Mental
Models of Information Retrieval Systems",
Journal=jasist, Volume=52, Number=6, Pages=445#"--"#459, Year=2001,
SeeAlso="Ch.~6 of Web Work~\cite{Ch:SDOK}",
Annote="good bibliography"
}
@Article{Wa:RAT,
Author="Leon A. Watts and Andrew F. Monk",
Title="Reasoning about tasks, activities and technology to support
collaboration",
Journal="Ergonomics", Year=1998, Volume=41, Number=11,
Pages=1583 #"--"# 1606,
Keyword="\K{task\_analysis}"
}
@InCollection{Lo:IDSSST,
Author="David F. Lohman and Patrick C. Kyllonen",
Title="Individual Differences in Solution Strategy on Spatial Tasks",
CROSSREF="Di:IDIC1", Year=1983, Chapter=4, Pages=105#"--"#135,
BookTitle="Individual Differences in Cognition",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability}",
}
@InCollection{Pe:DIDVSR,
Author="James W. Pellegrino and Susan R. Goldman",
Title="Developmental and Individual Differences in Verbal and Spatial
Reasoning",
CROSSREF="Di:IDIC1", Year=1983, Chapter=5, Pages=137#"--"#180,
Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{individual differences}",
}
@InBook{Co:PS,
Title="Problem Solving", Chapter=3, Pages=46#"--"#71,
BookTitle="The Psychology of Cognition",
Author="Gillian Cohen",
Publisher="Academic Press", Address="London",
Year=1977,
ISBN="0-12-178750-8", LCC="BF 311 C5548",
Keyword="\K{HCI}",
}
@Article{Wi:P3P,
Title="A Cookie By Any Other Name",
Author="Al Williams",
Column="Critical Decisions",
Journal="New Architect", Month=apr, Year=2002, Volume=7, Number=4,
Pages=16#"--"#17,
Annote="About session tracking (aka maintaining state) on the WWW and
the P3P (platform for privacy preferences) XML-based W3C-supported
standard. Compare P3P to PICS-based rules. Also discusses pros and
cons of other methods of maintaining state.",
Keyword="\K{System!WWW} $\bullet$ \K{privacy} $\bullet$ \K{state} $\bullet$
\K{P3P}"
}
@Article{Lu:TBM,
Title="Trust-building measures: a review of consumer health portals",
Author="Wenhong Luo and Mohammad Najdawi",
Journal=cacm, Volume=47, Number=1, Pages=108#"--"#113, Year=2004,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/962081.962089",
Keyword="\K{System!WWW} $\bullet$ \K{privacy}"
}
@Article{Ra:UsabSec,
Title="Believing in Myths",
Author="Marcus J. Ranum",
Note="Appeared in the \textit{Inside Risks} column",
Journal=cacm, Volume=47, Number=1, Pages=144, Year=2004,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/962081.962110",
Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
}
@InBook{Ko:GCSH,
Title="Graph Computation in Structuring Hypermedia",
BookTitle="Document Management for Hypermedia Design",
Author="Piet A. M. Kommers and Alcindo F. Ferreira and Alex W. Kwak",
Publisher="Springer-Verlag", Address="Berlin", Year=1998,
Chapter=14, Pages=142#"--"#166,
LCC="QA76.76 I59 K66 1998", ISBN="3-540-59483-3",
}
@Article{Ma:CoU
,Author="Martin Maguire"
,Title="Context of Use within usability activities"
,Journal=IJHCS ,Volume=55 ,Number=4 ,Month=oct ,Year=2001
,Pages=453#"--"#483
,URL="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-458NDYJ-14/1/1345da3d3831b51c134b1e185afb40be"
,Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@Article{Ha:PUNT
,Author="Roger R. Hall"
,Title="Prototyping for usability of new technology"
,Journal=IJHCS ,Volume=55 ,Number=4 ,Mont=oct ,Year=2001
,Pages=485#"--"#501
,URL="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-458NDYJ-15/1/58f22af92c41a9471beb1147d44b0071"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!prototyping} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@Article{Ra:TRCI
,Author="Ravindra S. Goonetilleke, Heloisa Martins Shih, Hung Kai On And
Julien Fritsch"
,Title="Effects of training and representational characteristics in icon
design"
,Journal=IJHCS ,Volume=55, Number=5 ,Month=nov ,Year=2001
,Pages=741#"--"#760
,URL="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-4582BWS-5/1/7d76ee534af7d10db7aecc4d9e93ee92"
,Abstract="`Icons are a very important component of graphical user
interfaces. However, icon design is still predominantly artistic in
nature and as a result icon selection is generally based on usability
evaluations after a set of alternative icons are developed. This
process tends to be time-consuming and costly. In this research, we
address the issues ofwhat should be depicted in an icon, given the
function it should represent, and how training affects the performance
of novice users when using an iconic interface. A set of 36 concrete
icons (12 functions) were selected and tested with a total of 30
participants. The experimental results indicate that complete
representations are generally superior for both untrained and trained
participants. Results also show that trained participants had shorter
response times when compared to untrained participants. Further
analysis suggests that ambiguity, uniqueness and dominance are three
important aspects to consider when designing and developing
icons. Applications of this research include the design of appropriate
icons for graphical user interfaces prior to usability testing and the
importance of a short training period to illustrate the composition of
an icon in an effort to improve the mental model associated with each
design.'"
,Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@InProceedings{McG:EMIBW
,Title="An evaluation of a multiple interface design solution for bloated
software"
,Author="Joanna McGrenere and Ronald M. Baecker and Kellogg S. Booth"
,BookTitle="Proceedings of the {SIGCHI} conference on Human factors in
computing systems: Changing our world, changing ourselves"
,Year=2002 ,Pages=164#"--"#170
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/503376.503406"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606} $\bullet$ \K{HCI}"
}
@Article{He:FWS
,Title="Finding the flow in web site search"
,Author="Marti Hearst and Ame Elliott and Jennifer English and Rashmi
Sinha and Kirsten Swearingen and Ka-Ping Yee"
,Journal=cacm ,Volume=45, Number=9 ,Month=Sep ,Year=2002
,Pages=42#"--"#49
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/567498.567525"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606} $\bullet$ \K{HCI}"
}
@InProceedings{Wa:MVS
,Title="The Mind' Views of Space"
,Author="Hongbin Wang and Todd R. Johnson and Jiajie Zhang"
,BookTitle="Proceedings of the Third International Conference on
Cognitive Science"
,Pages=191#"--"#198, Year=2001
,URL="http://acad88.sahs.uth.tmc.edu/research/publications/iccs2001spatial.pdf"
,Note="citation information NOT confirmed. URL used"
,Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item (first page)
`It is the purpose of this paper to review some of the relevant
findings about spatial information processing in the brain.'
%
\item (first page)
`Those tasks we typically called spatial tasks are generally not
purely spatial but extensively involve perception, attention,
general cognition, and motor components.'
%
\item (first page)
`A large body of evidence has shown that, regardless of how it is
acquired --- either through direct explorations or by means of
spatial artifacts (e.g., maps, virtual reality, and language
description) --- psychological space is often distored, relative,
asymmetric, hierarchical, and segmented. How and why this is so
remains elusive (for reviews, see McDonald \& Pellegrino, 1993;
Hunt and Waller, 1999; Tversky, 2000).'
\end{itemize}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@InCollection{Ar:UT
,Title="Usability Testing"
,Author="Stephen D. Armstrong and William C. Brewer and
Richard K. Steinberg"
,Chapter=18 ,Pages="403--432"
,BookTitle="Handbook of Human Factors Testing and Evaluation"
,Editor="Samuel G. Charlton and Thoma O'Brien"
,Edition="2nd"
,Publisher="Lawrence Erlbaum Associates"
,Year=2002
,ISBN="0-8058-3291-2"
}
@Article{Tu:81
,Author="Thomas S. Tullis"
,Title="An Evaluation of Alphanumeric, Graphics, and Color
Information Displays"
,Journal="Human Factors"
,Year=1981
,Volume=23 ,Number=5 ,Pages=541#"--"#550
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{interface}
$\bullet$ \K{HCI!colour}"
}
@InCollection{Tu:SD
,Author="Thomas S. Tullis"
,Title="Screen Design"
,BookTitle="Handbook of Human-Computer Interaction"
,CROSSREF="Ha:HHCI"
,Pages=377#"--"#411, Chapter=18
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606} $\bullet$ \K{evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{interface}"
,Annote="refs to speed up of telephone line fault detection by experts
using non-intuitive interface (I use these words to help me find the
reference). Also `illustrations of popular graphical techniques for
representing numerical data and some notes on their popular usage'
that Laura Leventhal hands out."
}
@InProceedings{Pi:GW
,Title="Groupware walkthrough: adding context to groupware usability
evaluation"
,Author="David Pinelle and Carl Gutwin"
,Pages=455#"--"#462 ,Year=2002
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/503376.503458"
,BookTitle="Proceedings of the {SIGCHI} conference on Human factors in
computing systems: Changing our world, changing ourselves"
,Address="Minneapolis, Minnesota, {USA}"
,Keywords="\K{groupware}"
}
@InProceedings{Ba:EDHEM
,Title="Empirical development of a heuristic evaluation methodology for
shared workspace groupware"
,Author="Kevin Baker and Saul Greenberg and Carl Gutwin"
,BookTitle="Proceedings of the 2002 {ACM} conference on Computer supported
cooperative work"
,Year=2002 ,Address="New Orleans, Louisiana, {USA}"
,Pages=96#"--"#105
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/587078.587093"
,Keyword="\K{heuristic} $\bullet$ \K{groupware}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:HEAD
,Author="Jennifer Mankoff and Anind K. Dey and Gary Hsieh and Julie
Kientz and Scott Lederer and Morgan Ames"
,Title="Heuristic evaluation of ambient displays"
,Pages=169#"--"#176
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/642611.642642"
,BookTitle="Proceedings of the conference on Human factors in computing
systems"
,Year=2003 ,Address="Fort Lauderdale, Florida, {USA}"
,Editor="Victoria Bellotti and Thomas Erickson and Gilbert Cockton and
Panu Korhonen"
,Keyword="\K{heuristic}"
,SeeAlso="Maglio and Campbell's study of peripheral info \cite{Ma:TDPI}"
}
@InProceedings{Ch:SSS
,Author= "Ed H. Chi and Peter Pirolli and James Pitkow"
,Title= "The scent of a site: a system for analyzing and predicting
information scent, usage, and usability of a Web site"
,BookTitle = "Proceedings of the {SIGCHI} conference on Human factors in
computing systems"
,Year= 2000
,ISBN= "1-58113-216-6"
,Pages= 161#"--"#168
,Location= "The Hague, The Netherlands"
,URL= "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/332040.332423"
,Publisher = {ACM Press}
,Keywords="\K{information scent}"
}
@InCollection{Ch:ISeek
,Author="Chun Wei Choo and Brian Detlor and Don Turnbull"
,Title="Information Seeking"
,CrossRef="Ch:WW"
,Chapter=1 ,Pages=3#"--"#27
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606} $\bullet$ \K{information seeking}"
}
@InCollection{Ch:SDOK
,Author="Chun Wei Choo and Brian Detlor and Don Turnbull"
,CrossRef="Ch:WW"
,Chapter=2 ,Pages=29#"--"#67
,Title="The Structure and Dynamics of Organizational Knowledge"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@InCollection{Ch:MISW
,Author="Chun Wei Choo and Brian Detlor and Don Turnbull"
,CrossRef="Ch:WW"
,Chapter=5 ,Pages=133#"--"#158
,Title="Models of Information Seeking on the {World Wide Web}"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606} $\bullet$ \K{information seeking}"
}
@InCollection{Ch:UOWU
,Author="Chun Wei Choo and Brian Detlor and Don Turnbull"
,CrossRef="Ch:WW"
,Chapter=6 ,Pages=159#"--"#187
,Title="Understanding Organizational {Web} Use"
,Annote="Recommend combining with Zhang \& Chignell (JASIS,
2001)~\cite{Zh:AEUCMM} for CS6606 class"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@InProceedings{Tu:OECP
,Author="Carl W. Turner"
,Title="The Online Experience and Consumers; Perceptions of E-Commerce
Security"
,BookTitle="Proceedings of the Human Facotrs and Ergonomics Society
46$^{\mbox{th}}$ Annual Meeting"
,Month=sep ,Year=2002
,Note="Copy from author (e-mail
$\langle$carl.turner.hxyf@statefarm.com$\rangle$)"
}
@InProceedings{Tu:HCFJ
,Author="Carl W. Turner"
,Title="How do consumers form their judgements of the security of
e-commerce web sites?"
,BookTitle="Workshop on {HCI} and Security Systems at {CHI} 2003"
,Address="Fort Lauderdale, {FL}"
,Month=6#"~"#apr ,Year=2003
,Note="Copy from author (e-mail $\langle$carl.turner.hxyf@statefarm.com$\rangle$)"
}
@InProceedings{Tu:FAPSP
,Author="Carl W. Turner"
,Title="Factors that Affect the Perception of Security and Privacy of
E-Commerce Web Sites"
,BookTitle="Fourth International Conference on Electronic Commerce
Research"
,Address="Dallas, {TX}"
,Month=nov ,Year=2001
,Note="Copy from author (e-mail
$\langle$carl.turner.hxyf@statefarm.com$\rangle$)"
}
@Article{Sa:SFAV
,Author="James R. Sackett"
,Title="Style, Function, and Assemblage Variability: A Reply to Binford"
,Journal="American Antiquity"
,Volume=51 ,Number=3 ,Month=jul ,Year=1986 ,Pages=628#"--"#634
,URL="http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0002-7316%28198607%2951%3A3%3C628%3ASFAAVA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-Z"
,Annote="Clarification of definition of `isochrestic', see Molotch's
\textit{Where Stuff Comes From}, p.\,84"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@Article{Kr:CC
,Author="Jim Krause"
,Title="Color Chameleon"
,Journal="How" ,Volume="XIX" ,Number=4, Month=aug ,Year=2004
,ISSN="0886-0483"
,Pages=58#"--"#63
,Keyword="\K{HCI!colour}"
}
@Article{Du:Axe
,Author="Jeff Duntemann"
,Title="Grinding the Speckled Axe"
,Journal="Dr. Dobb's Journal" ,Volume=15, Number=5, Note="Issue \#164"
,Month=may ,Year=1990
,Pages=141#"--"#145
,Keyword="\K{Programming}"
}
@InBook{Ki:COO
,Author="Roger King"
,Title="My cat is object-oriented"
,BookTitle="Object-oriented concepts, databases, and applications"
,Year=1989
,ISBN="0-201-14410-7"
,Pages=23#"--"#30
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/63320.66469"
,Publisher="{ACM} Press"
,Keyword="\K{Programming}"
}
@Article{Ne:ODNT
,Author="H. James Nelson and Deborah J. Armstrong and Mehdi Ghods"
,Title="Old Dogs and New Tricks"
,Journal=CACM ,Volume=45 ,Number=10 ,Month=oct ,Year=2002
,Pages=123#"--"#137
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/570907.570910"
,Keyword="\K{Programming}"
}
@InBook{Zd:FOOD
,Title="Fundamentals of Object-Oriented Databases"
,Pages=1#"--"#32
,BookTitle="Readings in Object-Oriented Database Systems"
,Author="Stanley B. Zdonik and David Maier"
,Publisher="Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc."
,Year=1990
,Address="San Mateo, California, {USA}"
,LCC="QA76.9.D3R42 1990"
,ISBN="0-55860-000-0"
,ISSN="1046-1698"
,Keyword="\K{Programming}"
}
@InCollection{De:GCAON
,Title="Given a Context by any Other Name: Methodological Tools for
Taming the Unruly Beast"
,Author="Brenda Dervin"
,Pages=13#"--"#38
,BookTitle="Information Seeking in Context"
,Editor="Pertti Vakkari and Reijo Savolainen and Brenda Dervin"
,Publisher="Taylor Graham" ,Year=1997
,ISBN="0-947568-71-9"
,Keyword="\K{information seeking} $\bullet$ \K{Usability!context}
$\bullet$ \K{context}"
}
@InProceedings{Wo:EASRW
,Author = "Joanna L. Wolfe"
,Title = "Effects of annotations on student readers and writers"
,BookTitle = "Proceedings of the fifth {ACM} conference on Digital
libraries"
,Year = 2000
,ISBN = "1-58113-231-X"
,Pages = 19#"--"#26
,Location = "San Antonio, {TX}"
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/336597.336620"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address="New York, {NY}"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InCollection{Du:UBE,
Title="User-Based Evaluations",
Author="Joseph S. Dumas",
Chapter=56, Pages="1093--1117",
BookTitle="The Human-Computer Interaction Handbook: Fundamentals,
Evolving Technologies, And Emerging Applications",
Editor="Julie A. Jacko and Andrew Sears",
Publisher="Lawrence Erlbaum and Associates",
Year=2003,
ISBN="0-8058-4468-6 (paper)",
Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Testing} $\bullet$ \K{Review}"
}
@Article{Do:SVADEIS
,Author="Ricard E. Downing and Joi L. Moore and Steven W. Brown"
,Title="The effects and interaction of spatial visualization and domain
expertise on information seeking"
,Journal="Computers in Human Behavior"
,Volume=21 ,Number=2 ,Pages=195#"--"#209 ,Year=2005 ,Month=mar
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2004.03.040"
,Annote="Abstract:\begin{quotation}
Information seeking skills are becoming increasingly important as
rapid and widespread developments in technology have made information
available in more formats and from more sources than ever
before. Research in human computer interaction (HCI) has demonstrated
that primary cognitive abilities represent a powerful predictor of
information-seeking success in electronic information
systems. Specifically, spatial visualization ability (SVA) seems to
be particularly related to hierarchical menus systems navigation
within databases, online learning environments, information archival
systems, and virtually all internet web sites. Research indicates
that individuals with low SVA take longer to complete tasks and
experience more errors on first attempts to find information in
hierarchical databases compared to those with high SVA. Understanding
the influences of SVA as well as its interaction with other aspects
of individual differences, such as domain expertise, is critical to
the design of systems intended to accommodate individual differences
in users.
\newline
Thirty-five college students (23 males and 12 females) were selected
from the general student body of two universities and assigned to
groups based upon their self-reported membership in one of two
specific disciplines: business (n=26) or biology (n=9). Participants
were then assigned to groups based upon scores on tests of SVA using
a median-split. Each participant conducted five searches: one neutral
search, two searches for business related information, and two
searches for biology related information using the FirstSearch
archival search tool.
\newline
A $2 \times 2$ factorial Analysis of Variance with one between-groups
variable (high vs. low SVA) and one within-group variable (high
vs. low domain expertise) indicated a significant main effect of SVA
as well as a significant main effect of Domain Expertise on the time
required to find their first relevant article on the search
topic. The analysis also revealed that there was no main effect for
SVA on the total number of relevant articles found during the search
period but there was a significant main effect of Domain Expertise on
the total total-number-of-relevant-articles found. There was no
interaction between SVA and Domain Expertise on either time to first
article or total number of articles found.
\newline
Results of the study extend existing knowledge regarding the effects
of SVA and domain expertise on information seeking by demonstrating a
strong effect of SVA and domain expertise on information seeking
skills. The results of this study also provide evidence in support of
interface designs that are friendlier to information seekers who have
low SVA. Related findings and suggestions for further research are
discussed.\end{quotation}
\begin{itemize}
\item Seems to confirm Dillon \& Watson's suggestion that
training can overcome individual differences{Di:UAinHCI}
\item Seems to confirm findings reported in Charney's chapter
\cite{Ch:EoH} that domain experts process text
differently
\item Methodology: used median-split on spatial ability
\item Review of some earlier studies of individual differences
with apparent effects on success with hypertext
\end{itemize}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{Expertise} $\bullet$
\K{individual differences}"
}
@InProceedings{Fo:ETE
,DOI="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1054972.1055018"
,Title="Examining task engagement in sensor-based statistical models
of human interruptibility"
,Author="James Fogarty and Andrew J. Ko and Htet Htet Aung and
Elspeth Golden and Karen P. Tang and Scott E. Hudson"
,Pages=331#"--"#340
,BookTitle="{CHI} '05: Proceedings of the {SIGCHI} conference on
Human factors in computing systems"
,Editor="Wendy Kellog and Shumin Zhai and Carolyn Cale and Gerritt
{van der Veer}"
,Location="Portland, {OR}"
,Publisher="{ACM} Press"
,Address="New York, {NY}"
,ISBN="1-58113-998-5"
,Month=2#"--7"#apr ,Year=2005
}
@InProceedings{Sa:MSUMSS
,Author = "Jeff Sauro and Erika Kindlund"
,Title = "A method to standardize usability metrics into a single score"
,BookTitle = "{CHI} '05: Proceedings of the {SIGCHI} conference on Human
factors in computing systems"
,Year = 2005
,Pages = 401#"--"#409
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1054972.1055028"
}
@InCollection{An:HTA
,Author="John Annett"
,Title="Hierarchical Task Analysis ({HTA})"
,Chapter=33
,Pages=7
,BookTitle="Handbook of Human Factors and Ergonomic Methods"
,Publisher="{CRC} Press"
,Editor="Neville Stanton and Alan Hedge and Karel Brookhuis and Eduardo
Salas and Hal Henrick"
,Year=2005
,ISBN="0-415-28700-6"
,SeeAlso="{HTA} in Handbook of Cognitive Task Design~\cite{An:HTAinHCTD}"
}
@Article{Le:HSISWB
,Author="Albert Levi"
,Title="How Secure Is Secure Web Browsing?"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=jul ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=7
,Pages=152
,Keywords="\K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Article{Ka:EE
,Author="Alan H. Karp"
,Title="{E}-Speak {E}-xplained"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=jul ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=7
,Pages=112#"--"#118
,Keywords="\K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Article{Cu:WSS
,Author="Francisco Curbera and Rania Khalaf and Nirmal Mukhi and Stefan
Tai and Sanjiva Weeawarana"
,Title="The Next Step in Web Services"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=oct ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=10
,Pages=29#"--"#34
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{Ya:WSC
,Author="Jian Yang"
,Title="Web Service Componentization"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=oct ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=7
,Pages=35#"--"#40
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{Li:TWS
,Author="Mark Little"
,Title="Transations and Web Services"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=oct ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=7
,Pages=49#"--"#54
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{Ca:BOMWS
,Author="Fabio Casati and Eric Shan and Umeshwar Dayal and Ming-Chien
Shen"
,Title="Business-oriented Management of Web Services"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=oct ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=7
,Pages=55#"--"#60
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{va:IWS
,Author="Willen-Jan {van den Heuvel} and Zakaria Maamar"
,Title="Moving Toward a Framework to Compose Intelligent Web Services"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=oct ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=7
,Pages=103#"--"#109
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{Le:IDMC
,Author="Young Eun Lee and Izak Benbasat"
,Title="Interface Design for Mobile Commerce"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=dec ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=12
,Pages=49#"--"#52
}
@Article{Ve:UUMC
,Author="Viswanath Venkatesh and V. Ramesh and Anne P. Massey"
,Title="Understanding Usability in Mobile Commerce"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=dec ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=12
,Pages=53#"--"#56
}
@Article{Ce:VWSR
,Author="Wojciech Cellary and Wojciech Wiza and Krzysztof Walczak"
,Title="Visualizing Search Results in {3D}"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=may ,Year=2004
,Volume=37 ,Number=5
,Pages=87#"--"#89
}
@Article{Ra:ANNCWU
,Author="Santosh K. Rangarajan and Vir V. Phoha and Kiran S. Balagani
and Rastko R. Selmic and S. S. Iyengar"
,Title="Adaptive Neural Network Clustering of {Web} Users"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=apr ,Year=2004
,Volume=37 ,Number=4
,Pages=34#"--"#40
}
@Article{La:CSRW
,Author="Butler W. Lampson"
,Title="Computer Security in the Real World"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=jun ,Year=2004
,Volume=37 ,Number=6
,Pages=37#"--"#46
,Keywords="\K{Security}"
}
@Article{Sc:WLPP
,Author="Bill Schilit and Jason Hong and Marco Grutser"
,Title="Wireless Location Privacy Protection"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=dec ,Year=2003
,Volume=36 ,Number=12
,Pages=135#"--"#137
,SeeAlso="PIKII~\cite{Ed:PIKII}"
}
@Article{Cl:CAT
,Author="Siobh{\'{a}}n Clarkeand Cormac Driver"
,Title="Context-Aware Trails"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=aug ,Year=2004
,Volume=37 ,Number=8
,Pages=97#"--"#99
,SeeAlso="Tague-Sutcliffe's \emph{Measuring
Information}~\cite{Jean'sBook}"
,Keywords="\K{HT!adaptive hypermedia} $\bullet$
\K{context-aware mobile computing}"
}
@Article{Br:TBC
,Author="Jeffrey M. Bradshaw and Ciamcomo Cabri and Rebecca Montanari"
,Title="Taking Back Cyberspace"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=jul ,Year=2003
,Volume=37 ,Number=8
,Pages=89#"--"#92
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{La:SWS
,Author="Christoph Schlueter Langdon"
,Title="The State of {Web} Services"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=jul ,Year=2003
,Volume=38 ,Number=7
,Pages=93#"--"#94
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{Ba:TSPP
,Author="Roberto J. Bayardo and Ramakrishnan Srikant"
,Title="Technological Solutions for Protecting Privacy"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=sep ,Year=2003
,Volume=36 ,Number=9
,Pages=115#"--"#118
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{privacy}"
}
@Article{Ch:WSC
,Author="Jen-Yao Chung and Kwei-Jay Lina dn Richard G. Mathieu"
,Title="{Web} Services Computing: Advancing Software Interoperability"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=oct ,Year=2003
,Volume=36 ,Number=10
,Pages=35#"--"#37
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{Tu:TSS
,Author="Mark Turner and David Budgen and Pearl Brereton"
,Title="Turning Software into a Service"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=oct ,Year=2003
,Volume=36 ,Number=10
,Pages=38#"--"#44
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{Li:WSWP
,Author="Charlie Lindahl and Elise Blount"
,Title="Weblogs: Simplifying {Web} Publishing"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=oct ,Year=2003
,Volume=36 ,Number=11
,Pages=114#"--"#116
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{blog}"
}
@Article{Le:AWSFR
,Author="Neal Leavitt"
,Title="Are Web Services Finally Ready to Deliver?"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=nov ,Year=2004
,Volume=37 ,Number=11
,Pages=14#"--"#18
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{Br:CKSC
,Author="Jessica Brazelton and G. Anthony Gorry"
,Title="Creating a Knowledge-Sharing Community: If you build it, will
they come?"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=feb ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=2
,Pages=23#"--"#25
,Keywords="\K{HT}"
}
@Article{Pa:TRGS
,Author="Jens Palsberg and Scott J. Baxter"
,Title="Teaching Reviewing to Graduate Students"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=dec ,Year=2002
,Volume=45 ,Number=12
,Pages=22#"--"#24
,Keywords="\K{6606} $\bullet$ \K{teaching}"
}
@Article{Ag:ESSTE
,Author="Peggy Agouris and Anthony Stefanidis"
,Title="Efficent Summarization of Spatiotemporal Events"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=jan ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=1
,Pages=65#"--"#66
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/602421.602454"
,SeeAlso="The Spinning Cube of Potential Doom \cite{La:SCPD}"
,Keywords="\K{spatial hypertext} $\bullet$ \K{network visualization}"
}
@Article{Pi:TAGW
,Author = "David Pinelle and Carl Gutwin and Saul Greenberg"
,Title = "Task analysis for groupware usability evaluation: Modeling
shared-workspace tasks with the mechanics of collaboration"
,Journal= TOCHI
,Volume = 10 ,Number = 4
,Year = 2003
,Pages = 281#"--"#311
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/966930.966932"
,SeeAlso= "Other groupware work by Gutwin/Greenberg et
al. (\cite{Pi:GW,Ba:EDHEM})"
,Keywords="\K{6606} $\bullet$ \K{task\_analysis} $\bullet$ \K{groupware}"
}
@Article{St:WS
,Author="Michael Stahl"
,Title="Web Services: Beyond Component-Based Computing"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=oct ,Year=2002
,Volume=45 ,Number=10
,Pages=71#"--"#76
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{Fe:WAWS
,Author="Christopher Ferris and Joel Farrell"
,Title="What Are Web Services"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=jun ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=6
,Pages=31
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
}
@Article{To:TRML
,Author="Rishi Toshniwal and Dharma P. Agrawal"
,Title="Tracing the Roots of Markup Languages"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=may ,Year=2004
,Volume=47 ,Number=5
,Pages=95#"--"#98
,SeeAlso="Letter to the editor~\cite{Mo:LDMR}"
,Keywords="\K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Article{Mo:LDMR
,Author="James D. Mooney"
,Title="Look Deeper for Markup Roots"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=jul ,Year=2004
,Volume=47 ,Number=7
,Pages=13
,Note="Letter to the editor"
,SeeAlso="Original article~\cite{To:TRML}"
,Keywords="\K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Article{Ka:WMWP
,Author="Petros Kavassalis and Stelios Lelis and Mahmoud Rafea and Seif
Haridi"
,Title="What Makes A Website Popular?"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=feb ,Year=2004
,Volume=47 ,Number=2
,Pages=51#"--"#55
,SeeAlso="'Aesthetics and usability: A look at color and balance'
\cite{Br:AaU}
and
'The role of context in perception of the aesthetics of web
pages over time' \cite{vSc:RCPA}"
,Keywords="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!website reputation / value assessment}"
}
@Article{Bo:HTQFA
,Author="Ruth Bolotin Schwartz and Michele C. Russo"
,Title="How To Quickly Find Articles in the Top {IS} Journals"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=feb ,Year=2004
,Volume=47 ,Number=2
,Pages=98#"--"#101
,Keywords="\K{6606}"
}
@Article{La:SCPD
,Author="Stephen Lau"
,Title="The Spinning Cube of Potential Doom"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=jun ,Year=2004
,Volume=47 ,Number=6
,Pages=25#"--"#26
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/990680.990699"
,SeeAlso="Efficent Summarzation of Spatiotemporal events \cite{Ag:ESSTE}"
,Keywords="\K{spatial hypertext} $\bullet$ \K{network visualization}"
}
@Article{DiP:SPI
,Author="Roberto {Di Pietro} and Luigi V. Maancini"
,Title="Security and Privacy Issues of Handheld and Wearable Wireless
Devices"
,Journal=cacm
,Month=sep ,Year=2003
,Volume=46 ,Number=9
,Pages=75#"--"#79
,Keywords="\K{PIKII}"
}
@Article{Xu:CNAV
,author = "Jennifer Xu and Hsinchun Chen"
,title = "Criminal network analysis and visualization"
,journal = cacm
,volume = 48 ,number = 6 ,pages = 100#"--"#107
,year = 2005
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1064830.1064834"
,Keyword="\K{network visualization}"
}
@Article{IHSIS
,Author="Peder Jungck and Simon S. Y. Shim"
,Title="Issues in High-Speed Internet Security"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=jul ,Year=2004
,Volume=37 ,Number=7
,Pages=36#"--"#42
}
@Article{Sc:DE
,Author="Bill N. Schillit and Uttam Sengupta"
,Title="Device Enembles"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Month=dec ,Year=2004
,Volume=37 ,Number=12
,Pages=56#"--"#64
,Keywords="\K{PIKII}"
}
@Article{Se:FB
,Author="Roger Sessions"
,Title="Fuzzy Boundaries: Objects, Components and Web Services"
,Journal="{ACM} Queue" ,Volume=2 ,Number=9, Pages=40#"--"#47
,Month=dec#"/"#jan ,Year="2004--2005"
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{web services}"
,SeeAlso="Part of a disparate series about web services as distributed
objects (in CACM, some IEEE pub, and now Queue)"
}
@Article{Se:HNWF
,Author="Sonn Seeley"
,Title="How Not to Write {FORTRAN} in Any Language"
,Journal="{ACM} Queue" ,Volume=2 ,Number=9, Pages=58#"--"#65
,Month=dec#"/"#jan ,Year="2004--2005"
,Keywords="programming style"
}
@Article{Vo:WPPO
,Author="Reinhard Voglmaier"
,Title="Web Publishing with {Perl} Objects"
,Journal="{SysAdmin}"
,Month=feb ,Year=2002
,Volume=11 ,Number=2
,Pages="8, 10, 12, 14--15"
,Keywords="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ database integration"
}
@Article{La:Nessus
,Author="Alan P. Laudicina"
,Title="Nessus --- A Powerful, Free Remote Security Scanner"
,Journal="{SysAdmin}"
,Month=may ,Year=2002
,Volume=11 ,Number=5
,Pages="24, 26, 28--30"
,Keywords="\K{Security}"
}
@Article{Me:AIDE
,Author="Arthur Messenger and Brian Gollsneider"
,Title="{AIDE} to the Rescue --- An Open Source Security Tool"
,Journal="{SysAdmin}"
,Month=mar ,Year=2003
,Volume=12 ,Number=3
,Pages="16, 18--20"
,Keywords="\K{Security}"
}
@Article{Pe:SWNP
,Author="Kostas Pentikousis and Robert Rothenberg"
,Title="Spatial {Web} Navigation with {Perl}"
,Journal="{SysAdmin}"
,Month="{Summer}" ,Year=2002
,Volume=11 ,Number=6
,Pages=57#"--"#62
,Keywords="\K{navigation} $\bullet$ 4173"
}
@Article{Ba:SMTWM
,Author="Derek Balling"
,Title="Using {Sendmail::Milter} To Tinker with Your Mail"
,Journal="{SysAdmin}"
,Month="{Summer}" ,Year=2002
,Volume=11 ,Number=6
,Pages=63#"--"#66
}
@InProceedings{Bl:SAIS
,Title="Spatial Ability and Information Shape: When do individual
differences matter"
,Author="James Blustein and Jason Satel"
,BookTitle="Third Workshop on Spatial Hypertext" ,Year=2003
,Editor="Shipman, {III}, Frank M. and Jim Rosenberg"
,Note=
"\url{http://www.cs.dal.ca/research/techreports/2003/CS-2003-11.shtml}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} "
}
@Article{Le:RTDOP
,Author = "Y. K. Leung and M. D. Apperley"
,Title = "A review and taxonomy of distortion-oriented presentation
techniques"
,Journal = "{ACM} Transactions Computer-Human Interaction"
,Volume = 1 ,Number = 2 ,Year = 1994
,Pages = 126#"--"#160
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/180171.180173"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
,Keyword="\K{Fisheye view}"
}
@InProceedings{Wh:WJCE
,Author="Alma Whitten, J.D. Tygar"
,Title="Why {Johnny} Can't Encrypt: A Usability Evaluation of {PGP} 5.0"
,Year=1999 ,Month=aug
,BookTitle="Proceedings of the 8th {USENIX} Security Symposium"
,Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Security} $\bullet$ \K{Classic}"
}
In this paper, we will describe our explorations of this issue. In
particular, we will draw on three major elements of our research to
date. The first is empirical investigation into everyday security
practices, looking at how people manage security as a practical,
day-to-day concern, and exploring the context in which security
decisions are made. This empirical work provides a foundation for our
reconsideration of the problems of security to a large degree as an
interactional problem. The second is our systems approach, based on
visualization and event-based architectures. This technical approach
provides a broad platform for investigating security and interaction,
based on a set of general principles. The third is our initial
experiences in a prototype deployment of these mechanisms in an
application for peer-to-peer file sharing in face-to-face
collaborative settings. We have been using this application as the
basis of an initial evaluation of our technology in support of
everyday security practices in collaborative workgroups."
,Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
}
@Article{Be:MIUGS
,Author="Bruce Beckles and Von Welch and Jim Basney"
,Title="Mechanisms for increasing the usability of grid security"
,Journal=IJHCS ,Volume=63 ,Number=1#"--"#2 ,Month=jul ,Year=2005
,Pages=74#"--"#101
,Note="\url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-4G94J0R-3/2/5091b0c39ca9b9e17034b62db0004969}"
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2005.04.017"
,Abstract="Grid security is based on public key infrastructure (PKI), an
architecture that offers strong security for inter-institutional
projects, making it ideal for computational grids. However, current
PKI implementations suffer from serious usability issues in terms of
end-user acquisition and management of credentials, something which
grid security inherits from its PKI foundation. In this paper, we
describe two parallel efforts to apply the concept of ``Plug-and-Play
PKI'', designed to improve PKI usability, to improve the usability of
grid security."
,Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
}
@Article{Ka:PITDEPMO
,Author="John Karat and Clare-Marie Karat and Carolyn Brodie and Jinjuan
Feng"
,Title="Privacy in information technology: Designing to enable privacy
policy management in organizations"
,Journal=IJHCS ,Volume=63 ,Number=1#"--"#2 ,Month=jul ,Year=2005
,Pages=153#"--"#174
,Note="\url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-4G94HXR-2/2/48131a577ae4dd148e0e6ab105df6a30}"
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2005.04.011"
,Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
,Abstract="As information technology continues to spread, we believe
that there will be an increasing awareness of a fundamental need to
address privacy concerns, and that doing so will require an
understanding of policies that govern information use accompanied by
development of technologies that can implement such policies. The
research reported here describes our efforts to design a system which
facilitates privacy policy authoring, implementation, and compliance
monitoring. We employed a variety of user-centered design methods
with 109 target users across the four steps of the research reported
here. This case study highlights the work of identifying
organizational privacy requirements, iteratively designing and
validating a prototype with target users, and conducting laboratory
tests to guide specific design decisions to meet the needs of
providing flexible privacy enabling technologies. Each of the four
steps in our work is identified and described, and directions for
future work in privacy are suggested."
}
@Article{Ad:BGPUPS
,Author="Anne Adams and Ann Blandford"
,Title="Bridging the gap between organizational and user perspectives of
security in the clinical domain"
,Journal=IJHCS ,Volume=63 ,Number=1#"--"#2 ,Month=jul ,Year=2005
,Pages=175#"--"#202
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2005.04.022"
,Note="\url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-4G94HXR-4/2/732fdc1be50f5f9123b9d653917b8914}"
,Abstract="
An understanding `communities of practice' can help to make sense of
existing security and privacy issues within organizations; the same
understanding can be used proactively to help bridge the gap between
organizational and end-user perspectives on these matters. Findings
from two studies within the health domain reveal contrasting
perspectives on enemy approach to organizational
security. Ethnographic evaluations involving in-depth interviews,
focus groups and observations with 93 participants (clinical staff,
managers, library staff and IT department members) were conducted in
two hospitals. All of the data was analysed using the social science
`grounded theory'. In one hospital, a community and user-centred
approach to the development of an organizational privacy and security
application produced a new communication medium that improved
corporate awareness across the organization. User involvement in the
development of this application increased the perceived importance,
for the designers, of application usability, quality and
aesthetics. However, other initiatives within this organization
produced clashes with informal working practices and communities of
practice. Within the second hospital, poor communication from IT
about security mechanisms resulted in their misuse by some employees,
who viewed them as a socially controlling force. Authentication
mechanisms were used to socially exclude users who were formally
authorized to access systems but whose access was unacceptable within
some local communities of practice. The importance of security
awareness and control are reviewed within the context of communities
of practice."
,SeeAlso="Shibu Basheer's MEC report and Andrew T. Zhou's MCS Thesis"
,Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
}
@InCollection{Je:ASDBI,
Title="Adapting Systems to Differences between Individuals",
Author="Frances Jennings and David Benyon and Dianne Murray",
BookTitle="Cognitive Ergonomics: Contributions from Experimental
Psychology",
CROSSREF="CogErg91",
Pages=243#"--"#256,
CallNo="BF 1 A17 v.76-78 1991",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item Abstract:
`Adaptive systems should be able to accommodate the preferred
interface styles of different users. An experiment was conducted
in order to determine whether significant differences exist
between individuals performing the same task, using different
interfaces. Individual users' performances on five different
interfaces to a computer database system, after the initial
learning stage, were compared with their scores on various
cognitive and personality tests. The results suggested that two
interface styles are necessary for database systems in order for
them to suit a range of users: an aided-navigation interface with
a constrained dialogue for low spatial ability users, and a
non-aided navigation interface with a flexible dialogue for high
spatial ability users. Both interfaces should minimize the amount
of verbal input necessary.'
(Record from HCIBIB
\url{http://hcibib.org/gs.cgi?word=checked&terms=E.vanderVeer.92.243})
\item differences in high/low spatial ability, field (in-)dependence
\item measures of time (efficiency), score (effectiveness), and
satisfaction (affect)
\end{itemize}",
SeeAlso="\begin{description}
\item[]
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item User analysis in {HCI}---the historical lessons from
individual differences research~\cite{Di:UAinHCI}
\item Accommodating Individual Differences in Searching a
Hierarchical File System~\cite{Vi:AIDSHFS}
\end{itemize}
\item[field (in-)dependence]
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item B. Allen in DL98 \cite{Br:IFRIS}
and JASIS \cite{Al:IDCUCD}
\item Charney \cite[pp.\,252, 262]{Ch:EoH}
\item Dillon \& Watson in IJHCS v.45
\cite[p.\,627]{Di:UAinHCI}
\item Dillon in JASIS 51(6) \cite{Di:SSHUDSIS}
\item N. Ford's {\itshape Cognitive Styles and Virtual
Environments} also in JASIS 51(6) \cite{Fo:CSVE}
\item Jennings et al. in CogErg91 \cite{Je:ASDBI}
\end{itemize}
\end{description}",
Keyword="\K{individual differences} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability}
$\bullet$ \K{HCI}"
}
@Article{Je:PPIU
,Author="Carlos Jensen and Colin Potts and Christian Jensen"
,Title="Privacy practices of Internet users: Self-reports versus
observed behavior"
,Journal=IJHCS ,Volume=63 ,Number=1#"--"#2 ,Month=jul ,Year=2005
,Pages=203#"--"#227
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2005.04.019"
,Note="\url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-4G9GP0G-1/2/c3694d1f71dbc4c60dcba8d50751021a}"
,Abstract="
Several recent surveys conclude that people are concerned about
privacy and consider it to be an important factor in their online
decision making. This paper reports on a study in which (1)~user
concerns were analysed more deeply and (2)~what users said was
contrasted with what they did in an experimental e-commerce
scenario. Eleven independent variables were shown to affect the
online behavior of at least some groups of users. Most significant
were trust marks present on web pages and the existence of a privacy
policy, though users seldom consulted the policy when one existed. We
also find that many users have inaccurate perceptions of their own
knowledge about privacy technology and vulnerabilities, and that
important user groups, like those similar to the Westin ``privacy
fundamentalists'', do not appear to form a cohesive group for
privacy-related decision making.
\newline
In this study we adopt an experimental economic research paradigm, a
method for examining user behavior which challenges the current
emphasis on survey data. We discuss these issues and the implications
of our results on user interpretation of trust marks and interaction
design. Although broad policy implications are beyond the scope of
this paper, we conclude by questioning the application of the
ethical/legal doctrine of informed consent to online transactions in
the light of the evidence that users frequently do not consult
privacy policies."
,SeeAlso="Shibu Basheer's MEC report"
,Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
}
@Article{Pr:KUCY
,Author="Blaine A. Price and Karim Adam and Bashar Nuseibeh"
,Title="Keeping ubiquitous computing to yourself: A practical model for
user control of privacy"
,Journal=IJHCS ,Volume=63 ,Number=1#"--"#2 ,Month=jul ,Year=2005
,Pages=228#"--"#253
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2005.04.008"
,Note="\url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-4G9GP0G-2/2/d8ad215e2e1e1abf9bfb4faa72855b60}"
,Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
,Abstract="As with all the major advances in information and
communication technology, ubiquitous computing (ubicomp) introduces
new risks to individual privacy. Our analysis of privacy protection
in ubicomp has identified four layers through which users must
navigate: the regulatory regime they are currently in, the type of
ubicomp service required, the type of data being disclosed, and their
personal privacy policy. We illustrate and compare the protection
afforded by regulation and by some major models for user control of
privacy. We identify the shortcomings of each and propose a model
which allows user control of privacy levels in a ubicomp
environment. Our model balances the user's privacy preferences
against the applicable privacy regulations and incorporates five
types of user controlled ``noise'' to protect location privacy by
introducing ambiguities. We also incorporate an economics-based
approach to assist users in balancing the trade-offs between giving
up privacy and receiving ubicomp services. We conclude with a
scenario and heuristic evaluation which suggests that regulation can
have both positive and negative influences on privacy interfaces in
ubicomp and that social translucence is an important heuristic for
ubicomp privacy interface functionality."
}
@Article{Li:PSSDP
,Author="Linda Little and Pam Briggs and Lynne Coventry"
,Title="Public space systems: Designing for privacy?"
,Journal=IJHCS ,Volume=63 ,Number=1#"--"#2 ,Month=jul ,Year=2005
,Pages=254#"--"#268
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2005.04.018"
,Note="\url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-4G94HXR-3/2/843376623fd6974e8a047ead884d32e1}"
,Keyword="\K{Usability} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
,Abstract="Technological systems for use in public places need to be
designed so people can use them efficiently, effectively, safely and
with satisfaction. A component factor in satisfaction is perceived
privacy. Current guidelines aimed at improving accessibility may
impact users perceptions of privacy. The aim of this study was to
explore whether different screen sizes affect perceptions of
privacy. Also, if partitioning around screens influences privacy
perceptions. An opportunity sample of 60 participants took part in
the study. The results that revealed 12'' screens were perceived as
more private by users than 15 and 17'' screens. Adding privacy
partitions improved user's perceptions of privacy on the 12 and 15''
screens but not on the 17''. These findings provide evidence that
slight changes in the physical design of systems can increase
perceived levels of privacy and therefore satisfaction."
}
@Article{Ca:CBSW3,
Author="Lara D. Catledge and James E. Pitkow",
Title="Characterizing browsing strategies in the {World-Wide} web",
Journal="Computer Networks and {ISDN} Systems",
Volume=27, Number=6, Month=apr, Year=1995, Pages=1065#"--"#1073,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0169-7552(95)00043-7",
Note="Appeared in Proceedings of the Third International WWW Conference\\
\url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6TYT-3YGTSP5-2D/2/3d7d76f90f2aa10415bb0e92f2c57d0d}",
Location="Darmstadt, Germany"
}
@InProceedings{Ah:SAIN
,Title="Navigation in Information Space: How Does Spatial Ability Play A
Part?"
,Author="Ishtiaq Ahmed and James Blustein"
,CROSSREF="WBC05"
,Pages=119#"--"#125
,Year=2005
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@InProceedings{Ah:NIS
,Title="Navigation in Information Space"
,Author="Ishtiaq Ahmed and James Blustein"
,CROSSREF="WBC05"
,Booktitle="{IADIS} International Conference on Web Based Communities"
,Pages=281#"--"#286
,Year=2005
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Ah:ISAN
,Title="Influence of Spatial Ability in Navigation"
,Author="Ishtiaq Ahmed and James Blustein"
,Journal="International Journal of Web Based Communities"
,Year=2006 ,Volume=2 ,Number=2 ,Pages=183#"--"#196
,URL="http://inderscience.metapress.com/link.asp?id=383yjj9f0rdvv3fv"
}
@InProceedings{Bl:EMBW
,Title="An Evaluation of Menu Breadcrumbs for the {WWW}"
,Author="James Blustein and Ishtiaq Ahmed and Keith Instone"
,CROSSREF="HT05" ,Year=2005
,BookTitle = "HYPERTEXT '05: Proceedings of the sixteenth ACM conference on
Hypertext and hypermedia"
,Pages=202#"--"#204
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1083356.1083394"
}
@InProceedings{Bl:IVID
,Title="Information Visualization for Intrusion Detection"
,Author="James Blustein and Daniel L. Silver and Ching-Lung Fu"
,BookTitle="{PST}'05: Third Annual Conference on Privacy, Security and Trust"
,Month=12#"--"#14#" "#oct ,Year=2005
,Location="St.~Andrews, {NB}"
,URL="http://www.lib.unb.ca/Texts/PST/2005/pdf/blustein.pdf"
}
@InProceedings{Fu:CSEF
,Title="Chronological Sampling for Email Filtering"
,Author="Ching-Lung Fu and D. Silver and J. Blustein"
,Year=2005
,BookTitle="Proceedings of the Workshop on Machine Learning for User
Modeling: Challenges [at 10th International Conference on User
Modeling ({UM}'2005)]"
,Pages=9#"--"#16
,Month=24#"--"#29#" "#jul
,URL="http://www-connex.lip6.fr/~artieres/UM2005/Proceedings.pdf"
}
@InProceedings{Ob:SAS
,Author="Hartmut Obendorf"
,Title="Simplifying annotation support for real-world-settings: A
comparative study of active reading"
,BookTitle = "HYPERTEXT '03: Proceedings of the fourteenth {ACM}
conference on Hypertext and hypermedia"
,Year=2003 ,CROSSREF="HT03"
,Pages=120#"--"#121
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/900051.900076"
,Keywords="\K{annotation}"
}
@Article{Gu:ESA
,Author = "Leo Gugerty and Richard A. Tyrrell and Thomas R. Aten and
K. Andy Edmonds"
,Title = "The effects of subpixel addressing on users' performance and
preferences during reading-related tasks"
,Journal = "{ACM} Transactions on Applied Perception"
,Volume = {1} ,number = {2} ,pages = 81#"--"#101
,Year = {2004}
,ISSN = {1544-3558}
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1024083.1024084"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
,Keywords="\K{Reading}"
,Annote="Abstract: \begin{quote} Subpixel addressing is a font-rendering
technology that triples the apparent horizontal resolution of liquid
crystal displays. Four experiments measured the effects of subpixel
addressing (Microsoft's ClearType) relative to standard (aliased)
font-rendering techniques. Participants preferred, and gave higher
readability ratings to, text that had been rendered using subpixel
addressing. Subpixel addressing also significantly improved the accuracy
of lexical decisions and the accuracy and speed of sentence
comprehension. Subpixel addressing did not affect word-naming
performance or reading speed during pleasure reading. Taken together,
these findings suggest that subpixel addressing provides substantial
benefits to users while adding no costs to display hardware.\end{quote}"
}
@Article{Mo:SANN
,Author="Bharath Kumar Mohan"
,Title="Searching Association Networks for Nurturers"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Volume=38 ,Number=10 ,Pages=54#"--"#60
,Year=2005 ,Month=oct
,DOI="10.1109/MC.2005.351"
,URL="http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?isnumber=32474&arnumber=1516058&count=19&index=8"
}
@Article{Di:SSW
,Author="Li Ding and Tim Finin and Anupam Joshi and Yun Peng and Rong Pan
and Pavan Reddivari"
,Title="Search on the {Semantic} {Web}"
,Journal="{IEEE} Computer"
,Volume=38 ,Number=10 ,Pages=62#"--"#69
,Year=2005 ,Month=oct
,DOI="10.1109/MC.2005.350"
,URL="http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?isnumber=32474&arnumber=1516060&count=19&index=9"
,Keywords="\K{RDF} $\bullet$ \K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Article{Du:RDF
,Author="Bob Ducharme"
,Title="{RDF}: The Resource Description Framework"
,Journal=DDJ
,Pages=38#"--"#41
,Year=2005 ,Month=apr
,Keywords="\K{RDF} $\bullet$ \K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@inproceedings{Ba:BGSUcs342
,Author = "Julie Barnes and Laura Leventhal"
,Title = "Turning the tables: introducing software engineering concepts in
a user interface design course"
,BookTitle = "{SIGCSE} '01: Proceedings of the thirty-second {SIGCSE}
technical symposium on Computer Science Education"
,Year = 2001
,ISBN = "1-58113-329-4"
,Pages = 214#"--"#218
,Location = "Charlotte, {NC}"
,DOI = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/364447.364587"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
,Keyword="\K{CS3160 (UID)}"
}
@Article{Sc:PR
,Author="Laura Scharer"
,Title="Pinpointing Requirements"
,Journal="Datamation"
,Year=1981 ,Month=apr
,Pages=139#"--"#151#" (139, 140, 142, 144, 146, 150, 151)"
,Keyword="\K{CS3160 (UID)}"
}
@Article{Ma:PIIS
,Author = "R. E. A. Mason and T. T. Carey"
,Title = "Prototyping interactive information systems"
,Journal = cacm
,Year = 1983, Volume = 26, Number = 5
,Pages = 347#"--"#354
,DOI = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/69586.358137"
,Keyword="\K{CS3160 (UID)}"
,SeeAlso="cites Scharer's pinpointing requirements~\cite{Sc:PR}"
}
@article{216881,
author = {William Horton},
title = {Top ten blunders by visual designers},
journal = {SIGGRAPH Comput. Graph.},
volume = {29},
number = {4},
year = {1995},
issn = {0097-8930},
pages = {20--24},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/216876.216881},
publisher = {ACM Press},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
}
@Article{Pe:WDTA
,Author="David M. Pennock and Gary W. Flake and Steve Lawrence and Eric
J. Glover and C. Lee Giles"
,Title="Winners don't take all: Characterizing the competition for links
on The Web"
,Journal=PNAS
,Year=2002 ,Volume=99 ,Number=8 ,Pages=5207#"--"#5211
,URL="www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.032085699"
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Article{
,Author= "Lada A. Adamic and Bernardo A. Huberman"
,Title= "{The Web's hidden order}"
,Journal=cacm ,Volume=44 ,Number=9 ,Pages=55#"--"#60 ,Year=2001
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/383694.383707"
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$ \K{Web graph}"
}
@Article{Ku:DEMSUI
,Author = "Cynthia Kuo and Adrian Perrig and Jesse Walker"
,Title = "Designing an evaluation method for security user interfaces:
lessons from studying secure wireless network configuration"
,Journal = int ,Volume = 13, Number = 3, Month=may#" + "#jun ,Year = 2006
,Pages = 28#"--"#31
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1125864.1125886"
}
@Article{Ha:ECSDM
,Author = "Jefferson B. Hardee and Ryan West and Christopher B. Mayhorn"
,Title = "To download or not to download: an examination of computer
security decision making"
,Journal = int ,Volume = 13, Number = 3, Month=may#" + "#jun ,Year = 2006
,Pages = 32#"--"#37
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1125864.1125887"
}
@Article{DeW:IUSAO
,Author = "Alexander J. DeWitt and Jasna Kuljis"
,Title = "Is usable security an oxymoron?"
,Journal = int ,Volume = 13, Number = 3, Month=may#" + "#jun ,Year = 2006
,Pages = 41#"--"#44
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1125864.1125889"
,SeeAlso="Why Johnny Can't Encrypt \cite{Wh:WJCE}"
}
@Article{FC:WDTI
,Author = "Lorrie Faith Cranor"
,Title = "What do they {``}indicate?{''}: evaluating security and privacy
indicators"
,Journal = int ,Volume = 13, Number = 3, Month=may#" + "#jun ,Year = 2006
,Pages = 45#"--"#47
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1125864.1125890"
,Keywords="\K{CS3160 (UID)}"
}
@Article{Ho:WML
,Author = "Lars Erik Holmquist"
,Title = "Welcome to the mobile life!"
,Journal = int ,Volume = 13, Number = 3, Month=may#" + "#jun ,Year = 2006
,Pages = "57, 71"
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1125864.1125898"
,SeeAlso="PIKII \cite{Ed:PIKII}"
}
@InCollection{Ca:ASA
,author = "Caplan, B. and Romans, S."
,Title = "Assessment of spatial abilities"
,BookTitle="Neuropsychology"
,pages = 379 #"--"# 419
,Year = 1998
,CROSSREF={Go:N98}
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Book{Go:N98
,Editor="Gerald Goldstein and Paul David Nussbaum and S. Beers"
,Title="Neuropsychology"
,Year=1998
,Location = "New York, {NY}"
,Publisher = {Plenum Press}
,ISBN="0-306-45646-X"
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@article{quaglino1867,
author = {Quaglino, A. and Borelli, G.},
title = {Emiplegia sinistra con amaurosi; guaragione; perdita totale
della percezione dei colori e della configurazione degli oggetti},
journal = {Giornale Italiano di Oftalmologia},
volume = 10,
pages = 106 #"--"# 117,
year = 1867,
note="[In Italian]. Cited by Caplan and Romans~\cite{Ca:ASA}"
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Article{burin00
,author = "Burin, D. and Delgado, A. and Prieto, G."
,title = "Solution strategies and gender differences in spatial
visualization tasks"
,journal = "Psicologica"
,volume = 21
,pages = 275 #"--"# 286
,year = 2000
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Book{Ca:HCASFAS
,Author = "John Bissell Carroll"
,Title = "Human Cognitive Abilities: A Survey of Factor-Analytic Studies"
,Publisher = "Cambridge University Press"
,Address = "New York"
,Year = 1993
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InCollection{Me:TCPEI
,Author = "S. Messick"
,Title = "The criterion problem in the evaluation of instruction:
Assessing possible, not just intended, outcomes"
,BookTitle="The Evaluation of Instruction: Issues and Problems"
,Year = 1988 ,CROSSREF={Wi:EoI88}
,Pages = 183 #"--"# 220
,Note="Cited by Carroll~\cite{Ca:HCASFAS}"
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Book{Wi:EoI88
,Editor="M. Wittrock and D. Wiley"
,Title="The Evaluation of Instruction: Issues and Problems"
,Year=1988
,Location = {New York}
,Publisher = {Holt, Rinehart and Winston}
,Note="Cited by Carroll~\cite{Ca:HCASFAS}"
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InProceedings{cribbin01
,Author = "T. Cribbin and C. Chen"
,Title= {Exploring Cognitive Issues in Visual Information Retrieval}
,BookTitle = "Proceedings of the Eighth {IFIP TC.13} Conference on
Human-Computer Interaction, {INTERACT} 2001"
,Pages=166#"--"#173
,Year = 2001
,Location = {Tokyo, Japan}
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@article{curl98
,author = {Curl, S. S. and Olfman, L. and Satzinger, J. W.}
,title = {An Investigation of the roles of individual differences and
user interface on database usability}
,journal = {The DATA BASE for Advances in Information Systems}
,volume = 29 ,number = 1 ,pages = 50 #"--"# 65
,year = 1998
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InProceedings{czerwinski02
,Author = {Czerwinski, Mary and Tan, Desney S. and Robertson, George}
,Title = "Women take a wider view"
,BookTitle = "Changing the World, Changing Ourselves: {CHI} 2002 Human
Factors in Computing Systems Conference Proceedings"
,Year = 2002
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/503376.503412"
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InBook{jordan98,
Author = "Patrick W. Jordan",
Title = "What is Usability?",
Chapter=2, Pages = 5 #"--"# 23,
BookTitle = "An Introduction to Usability",
Year = 1998,
Publisher = {Taylor and Francis Ltd.},
ISBN= {0-7484-0762-6},
}
@InProceedings{hook97,
Author = "Kristina H{\"{o}}{\"{o}}k",
Title= "Evaluating the utility and usability of an adaptive
hypermedia system",
BookTitle = "Proceedings of the Conference on Intelligent User
Interfaces ({IUI}'97)",
Year = 1997,
Location = "Orlando, {FL}",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InCollection{Kr:ESFB,
Author = "M. Kritchevsky",
Title = "The elementary spatial functions of the brain",
BookTitle = "Spatial cognition: Brain bases and development",
CROSSREF={Da:SC88},
pages = 111 #"--"# 140,
Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Article{St:IVALSI,
Author = "K. M. Stanney and G. Salvendy",
Title = "Information visualization: Assisting low spatial individuals
with information access tasks through the use of visual mediators",
Journal = "Ergonomics", ISSN="0014-0139",
Volume = 38, Number = 6,
Pages = 1184 #"--"# 1198,
Year = 1995,
Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InCollection{Sj:IDISCHN,
Author = "Marie Sj{\"{o}}linder",
Title = "Individual differences in spatial cognition and
hypermedia navigation",
BookTitle = "Towards a Framework for Design and Evaluation of
Navigation in Electronic Spaces",
Publisher={Swedish Institute of Computer Science},
Pages = 61 #"--"# 72,
Year = 1996,
url = "http://www.sics.se/humle/projects/persona/web/littsurvey/ch5.pdf",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Article{La:DBNEUSW3
,Author = "Lazonder, A. and Biemans, H. and Wopereis, G."
,Title = "Differences between novice and experienced users in searching
information on the {World Wide Web}"
,Journal = JASIS ,Volume = 51 ,Issue = 6 ,Pages = 576 #"--"# 581
,Year = 2000 ,Month = apr
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-4571(2000)51:6<576::AID-ASI9>3.0.CO;2-7"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Article{Liu:TRBLSL
,Author = "Liu, M. and Reed, W."
,Title = "The relationship between the learning strategies and learning
styles in a hypermedia environment"
,Journal = {Computers in Human Behavior}
,Volume = 10 ,Issue = 4 ,Pages = 419 #"--"# 434
,Year = 1994 ,month = feb
,Note = "\begin{itemize}\item{ERIC \#ED372727}
\item Paper presented at the Annual Conference of the
Association for Educational Communications and Technology
and Computer-Based Instructional Systems (Nashville, {TN})
16--20 Feb 1994
\end{itemize}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:OTTIS
,Author = "P. Maglio and R. Barrett"
,Title= "On the trail of information searchers"
,BookTitle = "Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Conference of the
Cognitive Science Society"
,Year = 1998
,Location = "Mahwah, {NJ}"
,Publisher = {LEA}
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Article{Pa:CSOLDSE
,Author = "Ruth A. Palmquist and Kyung-Sun Kim"
,Title = "Cognitive style and on-line database search experience as
predictors of Web search performance"
,Journal = JASIS ,Volume = 51 ,Number = 6 ,Pages = 558 #"--"# 566
,Year = 2000 ,Month = "22~"#mar
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-4571(2000)51:6<558::AID-ASI7>3.0.CO;2-9"
}
@InProceedings{dahlback00,
author = "Nils D{\"{a}}hlback and Peter L{\"{o}}nnqvist",
title= "Navigation and learning: A cognitive analysis of user tasks in
electronic information spaces",
BookTitle = "Proceedings of {NordiCHI} '00",
year = 2000,
Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InProceedings{dahlback96,
author = "Nils D{\"{a}}hlback and Kristina H{\"{o}}{\"{o}}k and
Marie Sj{\"{o}}linder",
title = "Spatial cognition in the mind and in the world: The case of
hypermedia navigation",
BookTitle = "The Eighteenth Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science
Society, {CogSci} '96",
Pages=195#"--"#200,
year = 1996,
location = {University of California, San Diego},
Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@InCollection{sjolinder96,
Author = "Marie Sj{\"{o}}linder",
Title = "Individual differences in spatial cognition and hypermedia
navigation",
BookTitle = "Towards a Framework for Design and Evaluation of
Navigation in Electronic Spaces",
publisher={Swedish Institute of Computer Science},
pages = 61 #"--"# 72,
year = 1996,
URL = "http://www.sics.se/humle/projects/persona/web/littsurvey/ch5.pdf",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Article{Di:DSBC
,Author = "Jan L. G. Dietz"
,Title = "The deep structure of business processes"
,Journal = cacm ,Volume = 49 ,Number = 5 ,Pages = 58#"--"#64
,Year = 2006
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1125944.1125976"
,Keyword="\K{task\_analysis}"
}
@Article{Hu:TTT
,Author = "William Hudson"
,Title = "A Tale of Two Tutorials: {A} Cognitive Approach to
Interactive System Design and Interaction Design Meets Agility"
,Journal = int ,Volume = 12 ,Number = 1 ,Pages = 49#"--"#51
,Year = 2005
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1041280.1041297"
,Keyword="\K{task\_analysis}"
}
@article{Zv:DCEMD
,Author = "Moshe Zviran and Dov Te'eni and Yuval Gross"
,Title = "Does color in email make a difference?"
,Journal=cacm ,Volume = 49 ,Number = 4 ,Pages = 94#"--"#99
,Year = 2006
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1121949.1121954"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!colour}"
}
@article{Sh:ECID
,Author = "Hal Shubin and Deborah Falck and Ati Gropius Johansen"
,Title = "Exploring color in interface design"
,Journal = {interactions} ,Volume = 3 ,Number = 4, Pages = 36#"--"#48
,Year = 1996
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/234813.234818"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!colour}"
}
@article{Ha:MWSWS
,Author = "Martin Halvey and Mark T. Keane and Barry Smyth"
,Title = "Mobile web surfing is the same as web surfing"
,Journal=cacm ,Volume = 49 ,Number = 3 ,Pages = 76#"--"#81
,Year = 2006
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1118178.1118179"
,SeeAlso="The Laws of the Web book \cite{Hu:LoW}"
}
@Article{Ho:CPMU,
Author="Kasper Hornb{\ae}k",
Title="Current practice in measuring usability: Challenges to usability
studies and research",
Journal="International Journal of Human-Computer Studies",
Volume=64, Number=2, Month=feb, Pages=79#"--"#102,
Year=2006,
URL="\url{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2005.06.002} \&
\url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-4GWBF6G-2/2/20dceaf90dde9c54e59adbbd6abe810b}",
Keyword="\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{Usability}"
}
@Article{Fe:DWCVSVA,
Title="The development of wayfinding competency: Asymmetrical effects of
visuo-spatial and verbal ability",
Author="Jacqueline Fenner and David Heathcote and Jennifer
Jerrams-Smith",
Journal="Journal of Environmental Psychology", Volume=20, Number=2,
Year=2000, Month=jun, Pages=165#"--"#175,
URL="\url{http://dx.doi.org.ezproxy.library.dal.ca/10.1006/jevp.1999.0162}
\& \url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WJ8-45FCBWY-V/2/40b23e5e1c328843786e9272d031cff0}",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Al:CASW,
Journal="The Professional Geographer",
Volume=51, Number=4, Pages=554#"--"#561,
Year=1999, Month=nov,
URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/0033-0124.00192",
Title="Cognitive Abilities in the Service of Wayfinding: A Functional
Approach",
Author="Gary L. Allen",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Wi:GSAAHA,
Title=" Generation of Summaries and Analogies and Analytic and Holistic
Abilities",
Author="M. C. Wittrock and Kathryn Alesandrini",
Journal="American Educational Research Journal",
Volume=27, Number=3, Pages=489#"--"#502,
Year=1990, Month="{Autumn}",
Annote="Abstract: \begin{quotation}
This study investigates predictions from Wittrock's model of
generative teaching regarding the effects of reader generation of
summaries and analogies upon the learning of a block of 50 paragraphs
of text. In this study, 59 students were individually assigned at
random to three treatments that were predicted and found to rank in
the following high to low order on the reading test:
(a)~Generate Summaries ($\overline{x} = 29.8$),
(b)~Generate Analogies ($\overline{x} = 27.2$), and
(c)~Read Text ($\overline{x} = 22.4$).
We also hypothesized and found that the
generation of analogies or summaries during reading differentially
stimulates learners' analytic and holistic (i.e., imagery)
abilities. In the Read Text treatment, only holistic ability
correlated with learning the high imagery text. In the Generate
Analogies treatment, only analytic ability correlated with learning
the text. In the Generate Summaries treatment, both holistic and
analytic ability correlated with learning.\end{quotation}",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{HV:SFHC
,Author="Linda Hermer-Vazquez and Elizabeth S. Spelke and Alla
S. Katsnelson"
,Title="Sources of Flexibility in Human Cognition: Dual-Task Studies of
Space and Language"
,Journal="Cognitive Psychology" ,Volume=39 ,Number=1 ,Pages=3#"--"#36
,Year=1999 ,Month=aug
,URL="\url{http://dx.doi.org.ezproxy.library.dal.ca/10.1006/cogp.1998.0713}
\& \url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WCR-45GWC3G-7/2/00d5973ebf90626e78c6a4b66c6d6009}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@inproceedings{Zh:WMM,
Author = "Yuejiao Zhang",
Title = "{Wiki} means more: hyperreading in {Wikipedia}",
Pages = 23#"--"#26,
BookTitle = HT06, CROSSREF={HT06},
URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1149941.1149946",
Keyword="\K{HT!CS6606}"
}
@inproceedings{Ma:HTtag
,Author = "Cameron Marlow and Mor Naaman and Danah Boyd and Marc Davis"
,Title = "{HT06, tagging paper, taxonomy, Flickr, academic article, to
read}"
,BookTitle=HT06 ,CROSSREF={HT06}
,Pages = 31#"--"#40
,URL = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1149941.1149949}
,Keyword="\K{HT!CS6606}"
}
@inproceedings{De:ICP
,Author = {Jean-Yves Delort}
,Title = "Identifying commented passages of documents using implicit
hyperlinks"
,BookTitle=HT06 ,CROSSREF={HT06}
,Pages = 89#"--"#98
,URL = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1149941.1149960}
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606}? $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606}?"
}
@InProceedings{Be:AGFtF
,Author = "Mathilde M. Bekker and Judith S. Olson and Gary M. Olson"
,Title = "Analysis of gestures in face-to-face design teams provides
guidance for how to use groupware in design"
,Pages = 157#"--"#166
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/225434.225452"
,BookTitle = "{DIS '95}: Proceedings of the conference on Designing
interactive systems"
,Location = "Ann Arbor, {MI}"
,Year = 1995
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
,ISBN = "0-89791-673-5"
}
@Article{Xa:p2pD
,Author="Josiane Xavier Parreira and Sebastian Michel and Gerhard Weikum"
,Title="{p2pDating}: Real life inspired semantic overlay networks for Web
search"
,Journal=ipm ,Month=may ,Year=2007
,Volume=43 ,Number=3 ,Pages=643#"-- "#664
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ipm.2006.09.007"
,Note="\url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VC8-4M69JW6-4/2/5c6de02794cb9d3d58e2ce2bcf86ac70}"
,Abstract="\begin{quotation}
We consider a network of autonomous peers forming a logically global
but physically distributed search engine, where every peer has its own
local collection generated by independently crawling the Web. A
challenging task in such systems is to efficiently route user queries
to peers that can deliver high quality results and be able to rank
these returned results, thus satisfying the users' information
need. However, the problem inherent with this scenario is selecting a
few promising peers out of an a priori unlimited number of peers. In
recent research a rather strict notion of semantic overlay networks has
been established. In most approaches, peers are connected to other
peers based on a rigid semantic profile by clustering them based on
their contents. In contrast, our strategy follows the spirit of peer
autonomy and creates semantic overlay networks based on the notion of
`peer-to-peer dating'. Peers are free to decide which connections they
create and which they want to avoid based on various usefulness
estimators. The proposed techniques can be easily integrated into
existing systems as they require only small additional bandwidth
consumption as most messages can be piggybacked onto established
communication. We show how we can greatly benefit from these additional
semantic relations during query routing in search engines, such as
Minerva, and in the JXP algorithm, which computes the PageRank
authority measure in a completely decentralized manner.
\end{quotation}"
}
@Article{Lo:DiTCU
,Author="Robert M. Losee"
,Title="Decisions in thesaurus construction and use"
,Journal=ipm ,Month=jul ,Year=2007
,Volume=43 ,Number=4 ,Pages=958#"--"#968
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ipm.2006.08.011"
,Note="\url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VC8-4MC0TP0-2/2/e7032536cb72215c2b4faa6a83a34e47}"
,Abstract="\begin{quotation}
A thesaurus and an ontology provide a set of structured terms,
phrases, and metadata, often in a hierarchical arrangement, that may
be used to index, search, and mine documents. We describe the
decisions that should be made when including a term, deciding whether
a term should be subdivided into its subclasses, or determining which
of more than one set of possible subclasses should be used. Based on
retrospective measurements or estimates of future performance when
using thesaurus terms in document ordering, decisions are made so as
to maximize performance. These decisions may be used in the automatic
construction of a thesaurus. The evaluation of an existing thesaurus
is described, consistent with the decision criteria developed
here. These kinds of user-focused decision-theoretic techniques may be
applied to other hierarchical applications, such as faceted
classification systems used in information architecture or the use of
hierarchical terms in 'breadcrumb navigation.'\end{quotation}"
,Keywords="Thesaurus $\bullet$ Ontology $\bullet$ Evaluation $\bullet$
Performance Measurement $\bullet$ Controlled vocabulary $\bullet$
breadcrumb"
}
@InProceedings{1085340
,Author = "Gord Davison and Steve Murphy and Rebecca Wong"
,Title = "The use of {eBooks} and interactive multimedia as alternative
forms of technical documentation"
,BookTitle = "{SIGDOC '05}: Proceedings of the 23rd annual international
conference on Design of communication"
,Year = 2005
,ISBN = "1-59593-175-9"
,Pages = 108#"--"#115
,Location = "Coventry, {UK}"
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1085313.1085340"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
}
@InProceedings{Pr:THRCM
,Author = "Aristidis Protopsaltis and Vassiliki Bouki"
,Title = "Towards a hypertext reading/comprehension model"
,BookTitle = "{SIGDOC} '05: Proceedings of the 23rd annual international
conference on Design of communication"
,Year = 2005
,ISBN = "1-59593-175-9"
,Pages = 159#"--"#166
,Location = "Coventry, {UK}"
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1085313.1085349"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
}
@InProceedings{An:HCIME
,Author = "Pedro Antunes and Carlos J. Costa"
,Title = "Handheld {CSCW} in the Meeting Environment"
,Pages = 47#"--"#60
,URL="http://www.springerlink.com/content/55e43xg2hlpcd30u"
,CROSSREF="CRIWG02", BookTitle="CRIWG02"
}
@article{Ei:EHRsurv
,Author = "Marco Eichelberg and Thomas Aden and J{\"{o}}rg Riesmeier and
Asuman Dogac and Gokce B. Laleci"
,Title = "A survey and analysis of Electronic Healthcare Record
standards"
,Journal=compsurv ,Volume=37 ,Number=4 ,Year=2005
,Pages = 277#"--"#315
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1118890.1118891"
,Keyword="\K{EHR}"
}
@inproceedings{Ga:CHEF
,Author = "Franca Garzotto and Luca Megale"
,Title = "{CHEF}: a user centered perspective for Cultural
Heritage Enterprise Fameworks"
,BookTitle = "{AVI} '06: Proceedings of the working conference on
Advanced visual interfaces"
,Year = 2006
,ISBN = "1-59593-353-0"
,Pages = 293#"--"#301
,Location = "{Venezia, Italy}"
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1133265.1133325"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "{New York}, {NY}"
}
@Article{Bo:HSiHT
,Title="How Spatial Is Hyperspace? {Interacting} with Hypertext
Documents: Cognitive Processes and Concepts"
,Author="Patricia M. Boechler"
,Journal="CyberPsychology \& Behavior"
,Year=2001
,Month=feb ,Volume=4 ,Number=1 ,Pages=23#"--"#46
,Abstract="\begin{quotation}
The World Wide Web provides us with a widely accessible technology,
fast access to massive amounts of information and services, and the
opportunity for personal interaction with numerous individuals
simultaneously. Underlying and influencing all of these activities is
our basic conceptualization of this new environment; an environment we
can view as having a cognitive component (hyperspace) and a social
component (cyberspace). This review argues that cognitive psychologists
have a key role to play in the identification and analysis of how the
processes of the mind interact with the Web. The body of literature on
cognitive processes provides us with knowledge about spatial
perceptions, strategies for navigation in space, memory functions and
limitations, and the formation of mental representations of
environments. Researchers of human cognition can offer established
methodologies and conceptual frameworks toward investigation of the
cognitions involved in the use of electronic environments like the
Web.
\end{quotation}"
,Annote="Mostly wrong and internally inconsistent, however
\begin{description}
\item[on page 35:]
`Montello\ldots{} comes to the conclusion that ``There
exist two or more distinct subsystems that represent spatial
information in different formats'' (p.\,17).'
\item[on page 38:]
`A distinction needs to be made between navigation
effectiveness and learning of the document material. \ldots'
\end{description}"
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/10949310151088352"
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{Review}"
}
@InCollection{Mo:NFWASK
,Author="Daniel R. Montello"
,Title="A New Framework for Understanding the Acquisition of
Spatial Knowledge in Large-Scale Environments"
,BookTitle="Spatial and Temporal Reasoning in Geographic Information
Systems"
,Chapter=11 ,Pages=143#" --- "#154 ,CROSSREF="Go:STRGIS"
,SeeAlso="Cited in `How Spatial Is Hyperspace?' by Boechler
(2001)~\cite[pp.\,35,46]{Bo:HSiHT}"
,HowPublished="Unofficial copy at
\url{http://www.geog.ucsb.edu/~montello/pubs/microgenesis.pdf}"
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{vVl:
,Title="The Measurement of Computer Literacy: A Comparison of
Self-Appraisal and Objective Tests"
,Author="Paul J. A. {van Vliet} and Marilyn G. Kletke and Goutam
Chakraborty"
,Journal=IJHCS ,Volume=40 ,Number=5 ,Month=may ,Year=1994
,Pages=835#"--"#857
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/ijhc.1994.1040"
,Abstract="Whenever decisions are made based upon a person's level
of computer literacy, it is important that such expertise is
accurately assessed. This paper takes a thorough methodological
approach to the measurement of computer literacy using both
objective and self-appraisal tests. While objective tests have
been used on many occasions to measure computer literacy, they
suffer from generalizability problems. Self-appraisal tests, on
the other hand, are subject to leniency bias by the
respondents. Taken together, though, the potential exists for the
establishment of a computer literacy assessment instrument with
high levels of generalizability and accuracy. For this research,
an objective test for computer literacy was developed and an
existing self-appraisal test was extended for use in a computer
literacy assessment experiment. It was found that the
self-appraisal test is a more lenient performance indicator than
the objective test. Both male and female subjects exhibited
substantial self-leniency in their self-appraisals, but both
self-leniency and gender-based differences in self-appraisal
decreased as the subjects' level of computer expertise
increased. Finally, the low level of convergence between the
self-appraisal test and the objective test found in this study
cast doubt on the ability of any self-appraisal test to assess
accurately computer literacy by itself. A combination of
different measures may be more appropriate when it is important
to determine computer literacy levels accurately."
,Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@Article{Sc:MTINVD
,Author="Dirk Schlender and Olaf H. Peters and Magnus Wienh{\"{o}}fer"
,Title="The effects of maps and textual information on navigation
in a desktop virtual environment"
,Journal="Spatial Cognition and Computation"
,Volume=2 ,Number=4 ,Month=dec ,Year=2000
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1015544021492"
,Pages=421#"--"#433
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Vu:MPHCI
,Title="Metacognitive Processes in Human-Computer Interaction:
Self-Assessments of Knowledge as Predictors of Computer Expertise"
,Author="Kim-Phuong L. Vu and Gerard L. Hanley and Thomas Z. Strybel
and Robert W. Proctor"
,Journal="International Journal Of Human-Computer Interaction"
,Year=2000 ,Volume=12 ,Number=1 ,Pages=43#"--"#71
,Annote="Abstract:\begin{quotation}
Metacognition, a person's knowledge of her or his own cognitive
processes, is a concept that can be applied to many areas of
human-computer interaction. This article reviews the state of
contemporary knowledge regarding metacognition and describes
implications for the domain of human-computer interaction. A
conceptual framework is presented that distinguishes monitoring
and regulation processes of metacognition. One aspect of
metacognition, self-evaluation of knowledge, was investigated
for a word processing application as an
illustration. An experiment was conducted to evaluate which of
four methods of self-assessment of expertise was the best
predictor of declarative knowledge (accuracy and completeness of
descriptions on how to perform a task). In addition, the
experiment examined whether classifying users based on
self-reported estimates of expertise would produce differences
in their declarative descriptions. Results showed that
individuals' ratings of their overall knowledge were better
predictors than were estimations of frequency of use, as would
be expected from the literature on metacognitive monitoring. In
addition, classifying users based on their self-ratings of
expertise showed differences in accuracy of declarative
knowledge and strategy chosen to perform a task. Experts were
more accurate in their descriptions of how to complete a task
compared to novices and used more complex strategies to complete
hard tasks.
\end{quotation}
Link to record in EBSCO database \url{http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=aph&AN=3322925&site=ehost-live}"
,Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@InCollection{An:HTAinHCTD
,Author="John Annett"
,Title="Hierarchical Task Analysis"
,Chapter=2 ,Pages=17#"--"#35
,BookTitle="Handbook of Cognitive Task Design"
,Editor="Erik Hollnagel"
,Publisher="Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc."
,Year=2003
,Keyword="\K{task\_analysis}"
}
@Article{We:EAE
,Title="Empirical Assessment of Expertise"
,Author="David J. Weiss and James Shanteau"
,Journal="Human Factors" ,Year=2003
,Volume=45 ,Number=1 ,Month="Spring"
,Pages=104#"--"#114
,Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@InCollection{Gr:EAER
,Title="Empirical Advances in Expertise Research"
,Author="Alison J. K. Green and K. J. Gilhooly"
,Chapter=2 ,Pages=45#"--"#70
,BookTitle="Advances in the Psychology of Thinking"
,Editor="M. T. Keane and K. J. Gilhooly"
,Year=1992 ,ISBN="0745009816" ,LCC="BF 441 A29 1992"
,Publisher="Harvester Wheatsheaf" ,Address="Toronto"
,Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@Article{Ca:ITSPK
,Title="Influence of text structure and prior knowledge of the
learner on reading comprehension, browsing, and perceived
control"
,Author="Fethi Calisir and Zafer Gurel"
,Journal="Computers in Human Behavior" ,Volume=19 ,Year=2003
,Pages=135#"--"#145
,Keyword="\K{Expertise} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@InProceedings{Ro:ASPAHD
,Author="Debopriyo Roy"
,Title="A Self-Paced Approach to Hypermedia Design for Patient Education"
,BookTitle="{SIGDOC}'04" ,Year=2004
,Location="Memphis, {TN}"
,Keyword="\K{EHR}"
}
@Article{De:CLHTR
,Author="Diana DeStefano and Jo-Anne LeFevre"
,Title="Cognitive load in hypertext reading: A review"
,Journal="Computers in Human Behavior"
,Volume=23 ,Number=3, Month=may ,Year=2007 ,Pages=1616#"--"#1641
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2005.08.012"
,AltURL="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VDC-4H74M34-1/2/e37cd716e267888b1aa40400779d40f3"
,Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{HT} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
,Annote="Abstract: \begin{quotation}
A process model of hypertext reading was used to generate
predictions about the effects of hypertext features on cognitive
processing during text navigation and comprehension. We
evaluated the predictions of the model with respect to the
extant literature, focusing on studies in which versions of
hypertexts were compared. Consistent with our predictions, the
increased demands of decision-making and visual processing in
hypertext impaired reading performance. Individual differences
in readers, such as working memory capacity and prior knowledge,
mediated the impact of hypertext features. For example, readers
with low working memory and low prior knowledge were usually
disadvantaged in hypertext. Some benefits were observed for
learners with low prior knowledge, however, if the hypertext
structure was hierarchical and consistent with that of the
knowledge domain. We also surveyed the effectiveness of
structural features designed to reduce cognitive load, including
graphical overviews, restricted access to links, and visible
link types. Complex graphical overviews did not reliably enable
learning and navigation, whereas navigational support from
restricted access and visible link types were helpful. We
identified gaps in the empirical literature and suggested future
studies to investigate cognitive processes in hypertext reading.
\end{quotation}"
}
@Article{Kv:CBTITD
,Author="Petr Kveton and Martin Jelinek and Dalibor Voboril and
Helena Klimusova"
,Title="Computer-based tests: the impact of test design and problem of
equivalency"
,Journal="Computers in Human Behavior"
,Volume=23 ,Number=1 ,Month=jan ,Year=2007 ,pages=32#"--"#51
,URL="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VDC-4C604BH-1/2/33158dab7fefea965f8818ca393817f4"
,Annote="Abstract:
\begin{quotation}
Nowadays, computerized forms of psychodiagnostic methods are
often produced without providing appropriate psychometric
characteristics, or without proving equivalency with
conventional forms. Moreover, there exist tests with more than
one computerized versions, which are mostly designed
differently. Study I focused on the impact of test design. It
was found that even simple change of color scheme (light
stimuli on dark background vs. dark stimuli on light
background) had a significant effect on subjects'
performance. Study II examined equivalency of a computerized
speeded test, which is broadly used within psychological
practitioners in the Czech Republic; this form was found
non-equivalent with its conventional counterpart.
\end{quotation}"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!colour}"
}
@Article{Ca:CSHMNL
,Author="Andrea Calcaterra and Alessandro Antonietti and Jean
Underwood"
,Title="Cognitive style, hypermedia navigation and learning"
,Journal="Computers \& Education"
,Volume=44 ,Number=4 ,month=may ,Year=2005 ,pages=441#"--"#457
,URL="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VCJ-4CHRC1X-3/2/a9a8db8a384d6e4c77864fd6b2814cdb"
,Annote="Abstract:
\begin{quotation}
This study examined the influence of cognitive style, spatial
orientation and computer expertise on hypertext navigation
patterns and learning outcomes when participants interacted
with a hypermedia presentation. A sample of 306 undergraduates
was pre-tested both on their cognitive style and on their
self-reported frequency and ability in using computers. From
the initial sample, 40 students were selected to form four
groups with the following characteristics: (a)~10 high computer
users --- sequential thinkers, (b)~10 high computer users ---
holistic thinkers, (c)~10 low computer users --- sequential
thinkers and (d)~10 low computer users --- holistic thinkers. All
participants completed a self-report questionnaire measuring
spatial orientation and were then requested to browse freely a
hypermedia presentation on the ancient Mayan
civilisation. Finally, the students completed a post-test to
assess the recall of the hypermedia presentation and the
cognitive organisation of the acquired knowledge. The results
indicated that hypermedia navigation behaviour was linked to
computer skills rather than to cognitive style and that
learning outcomes were unaffected by cognitive style or by
computer skills. However, learning outcomes were positively
affected by specific search patterns, that is by re-visiting
hypermedia sections and visiting overview sections in the early
stages of hypermedia browsing. Further, navigating overview
sections and holistic processing fostered knowledge
representation in the form of maps. These findings suggest that
individual differences can affect hypermedia navigation even
though their role in learning is complex and the impact of
cognitive style on learning outcomes was proved to be less
important than initially predicted.
\end{quotation}"
,Keywords="\K{HT} $\bullet$ \K{Design} $\bullet$ \K{Cognitive
style} $\bullet$ \{Expertise} $\bullet$ {spatial ability|?}"
}
@Article{Pe:ESLLCW
,Author="Robert Pearson and Paul van Schaik"
,Title="The effect of spatial layout of and link colour in web
pages on performance in a visual search task and an interactive
search task"
,Journal=ijhcs ,Volume=59 ,Number=3 ,Month=sep ,Year=2003
,pages=327#"--"#353
,URL="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-48DXRCC-4/2/27d011337a6b75e65b5dec844ed02ae8"
,Annote="Abstract:
\begin{quotation}
This study aimed to investigate the validity of psychological
experimental methods within human-computer interaction research
(Carroll, 1989) and to examine design guidelines pertaining to
hypertext link colour and positioning of navigation menu frames
as part of web documents. The results of past research on both
link colour and positioning of menus are mixed and guidelines
are usually not based on empirical evidence (Tullis, 1997;
Shneiderman, 1997). The study used a repeated measures
experimental design. Participants carried out both a visual
search task and an interactive search task. Task performance on
the two tasks did not to correlate ($p>0.05$), indicating that
the visual search task may lack external validity. Results of
the interactive search task suggest that the design convention
of blue links (Nielsen, 1999a) should be retained as responses
for blue were found to be significantly quicker than red,
$F(1,117)=14.526, p<0.001$,
$\mbox{MS}_{\mbox{colour}}=89.866$. Furthermore, an
effect of presentation position, $F(3,117)=8.410, p<0.001,
\mbox{MS}_{\mbox{position}}=61.015$, was found, with support
for menus on the left (Nielsen, 1999a; Campbell \& Maglio, 1999)
or right (Nielsen, 1999a). Evidence was also found to support
the conjecture that experienced Internet users might have
formed automatic attention responses to specific web page
designs. The need for validation of behavioural and
psychometric methods with task performance and the use of
cognitive-perceptual-motor modelling are discussed.
\end{quotation}"
,Keyword="\K{WWW} $\bullet$ \K{Design} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606}
$\bullet$ \K{HCI!colour} $\bullet$ \K{HT!CS6606}"
}
@Article{He:UEFAPR
,Author="Robin K. Henson and J. Kyle Roberts"
,Title="Use of exploratory factor analysis in published research:
Common errors and some comment on improved practice"
,Journal="Educational And Psychological Measurement"
,Year=2006
,Volume=66 ,Number=3 ,Pages=393#"--"#416
,Annote="Abstract:
\begin{quotation}
Given the proliferation of factor analysis applications in the
literature, the present article examines the use of factor
analysis in current published research across four psychological
journals. Notwithstanding ease of analysis due to computers, the
appropriate use of factor analysis requires a series of
thoughtful researcher judgments. These judgments directly affect
results and interpretations. The authors examine across studies
(a)~the decisions made while conducting exploratory factor
analyses ($N = 60$) and (b)~the information reported from the
analyses. In doing so, they present a review of the current
status of factor analytic practice, including comment on common
errors in use and reporting. Recommendations are proffered for
future practice as regards analytic decisions and reporting in
empirical research.
\end{quotation}"
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0013164405282485"
,Keyword="\K{Meta-analysis!methodology for} $\bullet$
\K{Statistics!factor analysis!recommended guides and guidelines}
$\bullet$ \K{Statistics!principal components analysis} $\bullet$
\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Statistics!MDS}"
}
@InCollection{He:IDSA
,Author="Mary Hegarty and David A. Waller"
,Title="Individual Differences in Spatial Abilities"
,Chapter=4 ,Pages=121#"--"#169
,BookTitle=CHVT ,Year=2005 ,CROSSREF="Sh:CHVST"
,Annote="
\begin{description}
\item [p.\,129]
In the most extensive study to date, Carroll (1993) surveyed
and reanalyzed more than 90 data sets that bear on the factor
structure of visuospatial ability. Carroll examined the
support for five visuospatial factors in the category that he
referred to as ``abilities in the domain of visual perception.''
These were visualization (VZ), spatial relations (SR),
closure speed (CS), flexibility of closure (CF), and
perceptual speed (P). A fifth factor, visual memory (MV) is
described in a chapter of Carroll's book on the domains of
learning and memory. It should be noted that Carroll's
definition is somewhat broader that those of McGee (1979b) and
Lohman (1979). For example, Lohman acknowledged the existence
of [CS], [P], and [MV], but referred to them as minor factors
that are not central to what is meant by ``spatial ability.''
%
\item[p.\,131]
A somewhat surprising result of Carroll's study is that he
failed to find strong and consistent evidence for the
separability of spatial relations from the spatial
visualization factor; only 7 of the 94 data sets that he
examined showed such a distinction. \ldots Despite this
observation, the distinction between spatial relations and
spatial visualization has remained important in the cognitive
analysis of spatial test performance.
%
\item[p.\,140]
Thus, it appears that to some extent spatial visualization
tests measure the ability to choose the optimal strategy for
solving a particular item, given one's abilities.
%
\item[p.\,133--136 (Evaluation of the Factor-Analytic Literature)]
%
\item[p.\,150]
Thorndyke and Goldin concluded that pencil-and-paper tests of
spatial abilities can be used effectively for the recruitment
and selection of personnel for which cognitive mapping skill
is important. [There is no definition of the term `cognitive
mapping' or `cognitive map' in this Chapter.]
%
%
\end{description}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$"
}
@InCollection{Ha:SDVA
,Author="Diane F. Halpern and Marcia L. Collaer"
,Title="Sex Differences in Visuospatial Abilities: More than meets
the eye"
,Chapter=5 ,Pages=170#"--"#212
,BookTitle=CHVT ,Year=2005 ,CROSSREF="Sh:CHVST"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Ne:DSC
,Author="Nora S. Newcombe and Amy E. Learmonth"
,Title="Development of Spatial Competence"
,Chapter=6 ,Pages=213#"--"#256
,BookTitle=CHVT ,Year=2005 ,CROSSREF="Sh:CHVST"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$"
}
@InCollection{Mo:Nav
,Author="Daniel R. Montello"
,Title="Navigation"
,Chapter=7 ,Pages=257#"--"#294
,BookTitle=CHVT ,Year=2005 ,CROSSREF="Sh:CHVST"
,Annote="
\begin{itemize}
\item concepts of wayfinding and locomotion
\item cognitive map = long-term knowledge representation (p.\,261)
\begin{quotation}
In contrast, \textit{declarative} knowledge is \ldots
So quite unlike the example of walking to a visible target,
a wayfinding act such as giving someone verbal directions
clearly requires the activation of lon-term knowledge
representations (the \textit{cognitive map}) into working
memory in order to access one's knowledge of place layouts
(Lovelace, Hegarty, \& Montello, 1999).
\end{quotation}
\item
\item
\end{itemize}"
,SeeAlso="
\begin{itemize}
\item Spence's a framework for navigation~\cite{Sp:FNav}
\item
\end{itemize}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$"
}
@InCollection{Ta:MUUM
,Author="Holly A. Taylor"
,Title="Mapping the Understanding of Understanding Maps"
,Chapter=8 ,Pages=295#"--"#333
,BookTitle=CHVT ,Year=2005 ,CROSSREF="Sh:CHVST"
,Annote="
\begin{itemize}
\item p.\,327 Newcombe (1985) \& Kulhavy et al. (1996)
\item
\end{itemize}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$"
}
@InCollection{Ri:SSM
,Author="Mike Rinck"
,Title="Spatial Situation Models"
,Chapter=9 ,Pages=334#"--"#382
,BookTitle=CHVT ,Year=2005 ,CROSSREF="Sh:CHVST"
,Annote="
\begin{description}
\item [defn of SSM]\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item SSMs are about situations described in text (usually
narratives)
\item SSM $\neq$ Dillon's info shape (p.\,338)
\item `Situation Models are the level of text representation
correspondng to deep understanding, and serve to
integrate the information stated in a text with the
reader's prior knowledge. Thus, they are an amlagamation
of information given by the text and information added by
the reader.' (p.\,335)
\item `Only with regard to text comprehension may mental
models and situation models be considered equivalent.
However, even within text comprehension, distinctions
between mental models and situation models may be made,
with situation models being considered mental models of
specific situations rather than of general states (see
Zwan, 2003).' (p.\,337)
\item reasons for the emphasis on spatial information (p.\,338)
\item (p.\,339)
\item (p.\,361, top)
\end{itemize}
\item [perceptural picture $\neq$ mental imagery (pp.\,337--8)]
\begin{itemize}
\item causal dimension pp.\,353 \& 373
\end{itemize}
\item [spatial gradient] \begin{itemize}\item[]
\item tested with maps and narrative
\item defn: p.\,???
\item robust p.\,350
\end{itemize}
\item [experts vs. novices] pp.\,361--2
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item deeper perception
\item schematic object
\item *check original publications*
\end{itemize}
\item [route following instructions] pp.\,369--370
\item [do readers's create SSM during reading?] pp.\,339--340
\item [recommended readings] p.\,380
\end{description}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{Expertise}"
}
@Article{vanH:ISVHN
,Author="Charlotte {van Hooijdonk} and Alfons Maes and Nicole
Ummelen"
,Title="`{I} have been here before': An investigation into spatial
verbalizations in hypertext navigation"
,Journal="Information Design Journal" ,Year=2006
,Volume=14 ,Number=1 ,Pages=8#"--"#21
,SeeAlso="Maglio \& Matlock's Metaphors We Surf The Web By~\cite{Ma:MWSWB}"
,Annote="Results of a talk-aloud study of navigating through two
websites to find answers to questions. Similar tasks to \cite{Bl:EMBW}.
Experts vs. non-experts for WWW surfing, but evaluation method not
described. Good background section.
\begin{itemize}
\item `Space is one of the most powerful tools for humans to
conceptualize abstract thought (e.g. Gibbs, 2005; Lakoff \&
Johnson, 1980)' [p.\,9] \emph{justification for interest}
\item `Boechler (2001) makes clear that space in hypertext
can never be conceived of in purely literal of ``Euclidean''
terms.\ldots But in her survey, Boechler makes clear that we
have hardly any evidence on the working of spatial notions and
metaphorical extensions in the minds of computer users.'
[p.\,9] (See notes about Boechler (2001)~\cite{Bo:HSiHT})
\item `After exploring the website, participants were asked to
draw the website's information structure. The analysis of
these drawings indicated that the participants did not draw
the spatial information structure of the websites, but they
drew conceptual relations between the information items
instead. Therefore, Farris et al. (2002) concluded that the
users' respresentation of hypertext is non-spatial' [p.\,10]
\item Breakdown of levels (contrast with Dillon's TIME,
Blustein's reasons for reading, and Browsing chapter in
ARIST):
`Hypertext users can be said to be mentally engaged in surface
(i.e., executing physical motional, perceptual actions),
propositional (e.g. understanding the content and structure of
hypertext) and mental/situational (e.g. planning and
monitoring) actions' [p.\,12] This partition into three
categories is not intended as a description of users mental
state but can still be used as a classification
scheme. [p.\,13 (paraphrase)]
\item All stats (except inter-rater reliability) used $\chi^2$
tests
\item Results: `users predominantly used spatial expressions to
conceptualize executions and low-level syntactic actions'
although more experienced users used spatial descriptions
more. [p.\,18]
\item `Thinking alound users have to conceptualize their
thoughts immediately on the fly, which may incite them to
verbalize the here and now of each and every screen, instead
of stepping back and talk [sic] about global structure or task
progress.' [p.\,18]
\item `This explorative analysis showed that users indeed use
spatial expressions to talk about their task, and this is the
outcome of the thinking aloud method.' [p.\,19]
\item S. Buckinham Shum is referred to as B.~Shum in the article
proper and references list.
\item Reference to Magilio and Matlock is squeezed into space
after Maes et al. instead of starting new line.
\end{itemize}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606!perhaps}"
}
@Article{Tv:SMSHPTS
,Author="Barbara Tversky"
,Title="Structures of mental spaces: How people think about space"
,Journal="Environment and Behavior" ,Month=jan ,Year=2003
,Volume=35 ,Number=1 ,Pages=66#"--"#80
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0013916502238865"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ "
}
@Article{Th:RCPPTSM
,Author="David J. Therriault and Gary E. Raney"
,Title="The Representation and Comprehension of Place-on-the-Page
and Text-Sequence Memory"
,Journal=SSR ,Volume=6 ,Number=2 ,Year=2002 ,Pages=117#"--"#134
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ "
}
@Article{Pe:BMRW
,Author="Charles A. Perfetti and Donald J. Bolger"
,Title="The Brain Might Read That Way"
,Journal=SSR ,Volume=8 ,Number=3 ,Year=2004 ,Pages=293#"--"#304
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ "
}
@InCollection{Ma:TCSIS99
,Author="Paul P. Maglio and Teenie Matlock"
,Title="The Conceptual Structure of Information Space"
,Chapter=9 ,Pages=155#"--"#173
,CROSSREF="Mu:SNIS"
,BookTitle="Social Navigation of Information Space"
}
@InCollection{Ra:CBINSNVW
,Author="Paul Rankin and Robert Spence"
,Title="A Contrst Between Information Navigation and Social
Navigation in Virtual Worlds"
,Chapter=10 ,Pages=174#"--"#197
,CROSSREF="Mu:SNIS"
}
@InCollection{Ho:EANS
,Author="Kristina H{\"{o}}{\"{o}}k and Martin Svennson"
,Title="Evaluating Adaptive Navigation Support"
,Chapter=10 ,Pages=237#"--"#249
,Keyword="\K{HT!adaptive hypermedia}"
,CROSSREF="Mu:SNIS"
}
@InCollection{Ho:FtS
,Author="Kristina H{\"{o}}{\"{o}}k and Martin Svennson"
,Title="Footprints in the Snow"
,Chapter=1 ,Pages=1#"--"#17
,CROSSREF="Mu:SNIS"
}
@InCollection{Ma:TCSIS2003
,Author="Paul P. Maglio and Teenie Matlock"
,Title="The Conceptual Structure of Information Space"
,Chapter=16 ,Pages=385#"--"#403#", "#427#"--"#450
,CROSSREF="Ho:DISTNA"
}
@InCollection{Sp:ISNF
,Author="Robert Spence"
,Title="Information Space Navigation: A Framework"
,Chapter=17 ,Pages=405#"--"#426#", "#427#"--"#450
,CROSSREF="Ho:DISTNA"
}
@Article{ADU
,Author="{Dr. Usability}"
,Title="Ask Dr.\,Usability"
,Journal=int ,volume=12 ,number=1 ,Year=2005
,Pages=9
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1041280.1041287"
,Keyword="\K{discount usability evaluation}"
}
@Article{Mi:SEW
,Author = "Jim Miller"
,Title = "Storytelling evolves on the Web: case study: {EXOCOG} and
the future of storytelling"
,Journal = int ,volume = 12 ,number = 1 ,year = 2005 ,pages = {30--47}
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1041280.1041281"
,Keyword="\K{Hypertext!literature} $\bullet$ Narrative"
}
@InProceedings{Di:ASNTIHCS
,Author = "Christine Diehl and Michael Ranney"
,Title = "Assessing spatial navigation tools with instructional
hypermedia for cognitive science"
,BookTitle = "{ICLS '96}: Proceedings of the 1996 international
conference on Learning sciences"
,Year = 1996
,ISBN="1-880094-23-1"
,Pages = 36#"--"#43
,Location = "Evanston, {IL}, {USA}"
,Publisher = "International Society of the Learning Sciences"
,Annote="Abstract \begin{quotation}
We investigated the influence of spatial visualization, spatial
reasoning, and environmental cognition skills on students' use of
instructional hypermedia navigation tools. Forty undergraduate
cognitive science students were randomly assigned to one of two
hypermedia system conditions: a map-like navigation tool
(``spatial'' representation) or a menu-like navigation tool
(``less spatial''). All students performed a searching activity,
then browsed freely through the system. Students then commented on
their perceptions of the system and drew concept maps of the
contents. Regression analyses indicate that performance with the
map-like navigation tool is positively correlated with
environmental cognition, whereas performance with the menu-like
navigation tool is positively correlated with spatial
visualization and reasoning. The general findings suggest that
spatial navigation tools should be incorporated into instructional
hypermedia with less spatial navigation methods to complement
students' spatial cognitive abilities.\end{quotation}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Gu:STSA
,Title="A Structural Theory of Spatial Abilities"
,Author="Ruth Guttman and Elizabeth E. Epstein and Marianne Amir and
Louis Guttman"
,Journal="Applied Psychological Measurement"
,Year=1990 ,Month=sep ,Volume=14 ,Number=3 ,Pages=217#"--"#236
,URL="http://apm.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/3/217"
,DOI="10.1177/014662169001400301"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@InCollection{OK:Hip
,Title="Hippocampus"
,Author="John O'Keefe"
,BookTitle="Encyclopedia of cognitive science" ,Volume=2
,CROSSREF="Na:EofCogSci"
,DOI="10.1002/0470018860.s00311"
,Annote="pp.342--3: episodic memory and navigation use different
parts of the human brain"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Ne:nav
,Title="Navigation"
,Author="Elrich Nehmzow"
,BookTitle="Encyclopedia of cognitive science"
,Pages=200#"--"#206 ,Volume=3
,CROSSREF="Na:EofCogSci"
,Keyword="\K{Navigation} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Br:MM
,Title="Mental Models"
,Author="William F. Brewer"
,BookTitle="Encyclopedia of cognitive science"
,Pages=1#"--"#6 ,Volume=3
,CROSSREF="Na:EofCogSci"
,Keyword="\K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Tv:SpCogPsy
,Title="Spatial Cognition, Psychology of"
,Author="Barbara Tversky"
,BookTitle="Encyclopedia of cognitive science"
,Pages=120#"--"#125 ,Volume=4
,CROSSREF="Na:EofCogSci"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Tv:VSR
,Title="Visuospatial Reasoning"
,Author="Barbara Tversky"
,BookTitle="The Cambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning"
,Pages=209#"--"#240 ,Chapter=10
,CROSSREF="Ho:CHTaR"
,SeeAlso="Holyoak on Analogy in the same volume \cite[\S{}Knowledge
Representation on pp.\,121--122]{Ho:Ana}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Ho:Ana
,Title="Analogy"
,Author="Keith J. Holyoak"
,BookTitle="The Cambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning"
,Pages=117#"--"#142 ,Chapter=6
,CROSSREF="Ho:CHTaR"
,SeeAlso="Tversky in the same volume \cite[p.\,225]{Tv:VSR}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Le:SpaLang
,Title="Spatial Language"
,Author="Stephen C. Levinson"
,BookTitle="Encyclopedia of cognitive science"
,Pages=131#"--"#137 ,Volume=4
,CROSSREF="Na:EofCogSci"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{Ca:ToCo
,Title="Topology and Cognition"
,Author="Roberto Casati"
,BookTitle="Encyclopedia of cognitive science"
,Pages=410#"--"#417 ,Volume=4
,CROSSREF="Na:EofCogSci"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@InCollection{CUEtest
,Title="Computer Understanding and Experience ({CUE}) Scale, (The)"
,Chapter="7.08" ,Pages=802#"--"#803 ,Volume=2
,Author="Denis Potosky"
,BookTitle="Commissioned Reviews of 250 Psychological Tests"
,Editor="John Maltby and Christopher Alan Lewis and Andrew Hill"
,Series="Mellen Studies in Psychology"
,Publisher="The Edwin Mellen Press" ,Address="Queenston, Ontario"
,Year=2000
,ISBN="0-7734-7454-4" ,LCC="BF176.C65 2000"
,Keyword="\K{Expertise} $\bullet$ \K{measurement}"
}
@InCollection{Bu:CoDiPro
,Author="Kirsten R. Butcher and Walter Kintsch"
,Title="Comprehension and Discourse Processing"
,BookTitle="Experimental Psychology"
,CROSSREF="We:HBoPsych:4ExpPsych"
,Chapter=21 ,Pages=575#"--"#595
,Keyword="\K{Reading} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@Article{Ch:AWSDC
,Author="Aline Chevalier and Nathalie Bonnardel"
,Title="Articulation of web site design constraints: Effects of the
task and designers' expertise"
,Journal="Computers in Human Behavior"
,Volume=23 ,Number=5 ,Year=2007 ,Month=sep ,Pages=2455#"--"#2472
,URL="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VDC-4K7NHK4-1/2/60bd5dfb9d8b15ce53e1ef16faab2a31"
,Annote="Abstract:\begin{quotation}
This paper aims at contributing to a better understanding of the
cognitive activities of web site designers and, more precisely,
their articulation and satisfaction of various design
constraints. In this paper, we first present an experiment in
which professional and novice designers have to evaluate a web
site developed for reflecting usability errors identified in web
sites. Then, the results obtained in this evaluation task are
compared with results previously obtained in a design task, in
which professional and novice designers had to create a web
site. Data analyses focused on the number and nature of
constraints articulated by designers in these two types of tasks
(evaluation vs design). In particular, we distinguished
constraints linked with the client of the site and constraints
linked with the future web users. The obtained results show
effects of both the level of expertise and the task. While
designing, all of the designers focused mainly on constraints
linked with the client. In contrast, while evaluating the web
site, novices focused on constraints linked with the user, whereas
professionals shared their attention between these two kinds of
constraints (client vs user-oriented constraints). Based on these
results, we conclude with ways for supporting designers'
activities.\end{quotation}"
,SeeAlso="Levi \& Conrad's A heuristic evaluation of a {WWW}
prototype \cite{Le:HEW3P}"
,Keyword="\K{Expertise} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW}"
}
@InCollection{Di:SiSS,
Author="Andrew Dillon",
Title="Shape: information as a structured space",
BookTitle="Designing Usable Electronic Text",
Chapter=7, Pages=116#"--"#133, CROSSREF="Di:DUET2e",
Annote="
\begin{description}
\item[defn `shape'] \begin{itemize}\item[]
\item pp.118 \& 126
\item relating to three meanings of `structure' in classical
HT literature (p.118)
\item `those spatial-semantic properties that convey
coherence' (p.126)
\end{itemize}
\item[pp.119--120]
Kintsch \& van\,Dijk's schema theory of discourse
comprehension contrasted with Johnson-Laird's view
\begin{itemize}
\item K\&vanD: macropropositional hierarchy `organised set
of global or thematic units about the events, acts,
and actors in the text'
\item clarification about cloze test from \cite{Di:RMTS}
\item concludes (p.120) that no difference \emph{in
practice} for human factors work
\end{itemize}
\item[p.120]
`Viewing structure as a component of texts leads directly to
the view of information as space and the readers as
navigator. This in turn invites a direct mapping between
psychological theory and information design that has been
unquestioningly accepted by researchers in this domain.'
\item[applications of schema theory]
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item there is a continuum from landmark knowledge to route
knowledge to map (or survey) knowledge (p.121)
\item expertise as socialisation in community (p.129)
(see also Charney's chapter~\cite{Ch:EoH}
\end{itemize}
\item[evidence for shape]
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item p.123, first full paragraph
\item p.127
\end{itemize}
\item[narrative \& imposition of structure]
\begin{itemize}\item[]
\item `intercoupling of spatial and semantic components of
memory' (p.126)
\item `Humans manifest a native cognitive tndency to impose
structure on information through use which is
crucial to identifying appropriate information
visualisations (p.\,126--127)
\item `All the evidence we have accumulated on the
spatial-semantic issues suggests that spatial cues
are coupled to semantic information as the user
naturally seeks to abstract regularities in the
information space.' (p.132)
\end{itemize}
\end{description}",
Keyword="\K{Info Shape}"
}
@InProceedings{Do:SWTRBP
,Author="Christian Doerr and Daniel von Dincklage and Amer Diwan"
,Title="Simplifying Web Traversals By Recognizing Behavior Patterns"
,Pages=105#"--"#114
,BookTitle=HT07, CROSSREF="HT07"
,Annote="Server code to insert shortcut links based on observed
patterns of user behaviour. Interesting that many users do not
use the shortcuts but follow previous patterns."
,Keyword="\K{HT!well-trodden paths} $\bullet$ \K{HT!AutoGen}"
}
@InProceedings{Vi:UTWAE
,Author="Markel Vigo and Alfred Kobsa and Myriam Arrue and Julio
Abascal"
,Title="User-Tailored Web Accessibility Evaluations"
,Pages=95#"--"#104
,BookTitle=HT07, CROSSREF="HT07"
,Annote="machine-readable rules ({CC/PP}), provides info to user
agent to alter webpage. Figure~8 and accompanying text shows
model."
}
@Article{Fa:USH
,Author="J. Shawn Farris and Keith S. Jones and Peter D. Elgin"
,Title="Users' schemata of hypermedia: what is so `spatial' about a website?"
,Journal="Interacting with Computers"
,Volume=14, Number=5, Month=oct ,Year=2002 ,Pages=487#"--"#502
,URL="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6V0D-45JPM5W-1/2/1779f289001204c079f5536a4c628d7e"
,Annote="\begin{quotation}
This study examined users' schemata of hypermedia. It is
frequently assumed that users' schemata contain spatial
information about how the pages of a website are
interconnected. However, it is not clear how these schemata could
contain such information when none is presented to the user while
he/she is exploring the website. Unfortunately, there has been
little research addressing this assumption. Toward that end, the
reported study examined the mental representations
(i.e. schemata) acquired when using hypermedia by systematically
varying the interconnections within a website while holding the
information that the website contained constant. Analyses of 40
participants' drawings of the website's organization indicate
that drawings largely reflected conceptual (i.e. semantic)
relationships, and not the true nature of the website's
interconnections. In light of this research, it is suggested that
we reevaluate the conjecture that hypermedia is mentally
represented in ways similar to the physical world.\end{quotation}
This is an example of why IwC is such a lousy journal, did they
ever consider their underlying assumption about why so many
people are talking about SpAb and HT? Nope. See Dillon for
InfoShape, see homeopathic fallacy for an earlier debunking of
this myth."
,SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Dillon in JASIS 51(6) \cite{Di:SSHUDSIS}
\item Homeopathic Fallacy \cite{Mc:HpathFall}
\item Usability News reported on a study where readers drew maps
of websites
\item S. Jones and G. E. Burnett (at U Nottingham)
\textsl{Children's navigation of hyperspace --- Are spatial
skills important?}
\item Bryce Allen in JASIS (2000) \cite{Al:IDCUCD} for other
experiments observing people using an IR systems
\end{itemize}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{information shape}"
}
@Article{Sl:IMMG
,Author="Debra J. Slone"
,Title="The influence of mental models and goals on search patterns
during {Web} interaction"
,Journal=JASIST
,Volume=53 ,Number=13 ,Pages=1152#"--"#1169 ,Year=2002
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/asi.10141"
,Annote="Abstract:\begin{quotation}
This article reports on a study that uses a new analysis and
display tool to examine the influences of understanding the
system and goals on end-user Internet searching. Thirty-one
public library users were observed searching the Web and/or a
Web-based on-line catalog. The study identified four user
categories, distinguished by the number of search approaches
employed. These included linking, use of search engines, URL
use, on-line catalog searching, and searching within a specific
Web-site domain. Results conclude that experience and
motivation, elements of situational goals and mental models,
work in tandem to determine search approaches, Web sites
visited, and sources used. People who sought information for
job-related or educational purposes were highly motivated. Thus,
they were persistent. Those who had a great deal of Internet
experience used an array of tools; while those with immature
mental models of the Internet relied more heavily on the Web
on-line catalog or off-line sources. People seeking information
for recreational or personal use were not highly
motivated. Whether experienced or not, they relied on
serendipity, linking, and other tasks that were not cognitively
overbearing. When searching became too difficult, they abandoned
the Internet as an information source.
\end{quotation}
{}
Could it be that na{\"{\i}}ve users are that way because of spatial
ability barriers?"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@InProceedings{Jo:CNH
,Author="S. Jones and G. E. Burnett"
,Title=" Children's Navigation of Hyperspace --- Are Spatial Skills
Important?"
,BookTitle="6th {IASTED} International conference on Web-based
education"
,Location="Chamonix, France"
,Year=2007 ,Month=14#"--"#16#" "#mar
,URL="http://www.mrl.nott.ac.uk/~sjj/Final%20paper_WBE2007.pdf"
,Annote="Abstract
\begin{quotation}
Hypertext is becoming increasingly popular as a platform for
educational material, allowing the user autonomy and
flexibility in choosing a route through the presented
information. However, the required decision-making process
places extra cognitive demands on the user, and this may
result in disorientation and the phenomenon known as `lost in
hyperspace'. Individuals with high spatial ability appear to
demonstrate superior navigational skills within hypertext,
completing tasks more quickly and with fewer errors then
those with low spatial ability. They tend to form more
accurate internal representations, or cognitive maps, of
hypertext systems that correspond better to the underlying
physical structure. Little research has been carried out with
children to assess their formation of cognitive maps of
hyperspace. In this study, 32 children aged 10--11 years from
a primary school in the UK were given search tasks to
complete on an environmental Web site. Various measures were
made of their navigational efficiency, their degree of
lostness, and their ability to complete a map of the routes
they had traversed. Those with high spatial ability completed
the tasks in shorter time, became lost less frequently, and
completed the maps more accurately. This paper discusses the
implications of these results to the success of hypertext
learning environments for learners with low spatial ability.
\end{quotation}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Ta:ANWAIBU
,Author="Hironobu Takagi and Shin Saito and Kentarou Fukuda and
Chieko Asakawa"
,Title="Analysis of Navigability of Web Applications for Improving
Blind Usability"
,Journal=TCHI ,Volume=14 ,Number=3 ,Year=2007 ,Month=sep
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1279703"
,Annote="
\begin{itemize}
\item study of blind users Web surfing with voice browsers
\item found no overall time difference for enhanced pages
\emph{but} more time using content and less using
navigation/scanning for content (pp.\,26--27)
\item proposal of landmark-oriented navigation model
\begin{itemize}
\item landmark model is to find main content (avoiding top
of webpage and navigation menus) before really
engaging the content
\item landmarks defined as `fragments with strong
information scent' (p.\,31)
\end{itemize}
\item found that users rely on `scanning navigation' rather
than `logical navigation'
\item application of Cognitive Walkthrough For the WWW
\item application of Information Scent
\item application of Nonvisual Visualization Method
\end{itemize}"
,Keyword="\K{Navigation} $\bullet$ \K{information scent} $\bullet$
\K{Evaluation!Cognitive walkthrough} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!cultural factors!blind users}"
}
@Article{Sh:BPIT
,Author = "Kristen Shinohara and Josh Tenenberg"
,Title = "A blind person's interactions with technology"
,Journal= cacm ,Volume=52 ,Number=8 ,Pages=58#"--"#66
,Year = 2009
,URL ="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1536616.1536636"
,Keyword="\K{Navigation} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!cultural factors!blind users}"
}
@Article{Th:BTG
,Author="Mary Frances Theofanos and Janice (Ginny) Redish"
,Journal=int ,Volume=10 ,Number=6 ,Pages=36#"--"#51
,Year=2003 ,Month=nov#" + "#dec
,Title="Bridging the gap: between accessibility and usability"
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/947226.947227"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors!blind users}"
}
@Article{Gw:IMLSWN
,Author="Jacek Gwizdka and Ian Spence"
,Title="Implicit measures of lostness and success in web navigation"
,Journal="Interacting with Computers" ,Year=2007
,Volume=19 ,Pages=357#"--"#369
,Abstract="In two studies, we investigated the ability of a variety
of structural and temporal measures computed from a web navigation
path to predict lostness and task success. The user's task was to
find requested target information on specified websites. The web
navigation measures were based on counts of visits to web pages
and other statistical properties of the web usage graph (such as
compactness, stratum, and similarity to the optimal path).
Subjective lostness was best predicted by similarity to the
optimal path and time on task. The best overall predictor of
success on individual tasks was similarity to the optimal path,
but other predictors were sometimes superior depending on the
particular web navigation task. These measures can be used to
diagnose user navigational problems and to help identify problems
in website design."
,URL="dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intcom.2007.01.001"
,SeeAlso="Botafogo et al.~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics}"
,Keyword="\K{Metric} $\bullet$ \K{Evaluation} $\bullet$
\K{information seeking} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation!Lostness}"
}
@Article{We:LvsGNav
,Author="Jane Webster and Jaspreet S. Ahuja"
,Title="Enhancing the Design of Web Navigation Systems:
The Influence of User Disorientation On Engagement and Performance"
,Journal="{MIS} Quarterly"
,Volume=30 ,Number=3 ,Pages=661#"--"#678 ,Month=sep ,Year=2006
,Keyword="\K{Navigation}"
}
@InProceedings{Wi:RDSVDT
,Author="Eric N. Wiebe"
,Title="A Review of Dynamic and Static Visual Display Techniques"
,Year=1991 ,Month=nov
,BookTitle="Engineering Design Graphics Division of the American
Society for Engineering Education, Mid-Year Meeting"
,Location="Old Dominion University, Northolk, {VA}"
}
@InProceedings{Jo:SNS2W3
,Author = "Steve Jones and Andy Cockburn"
,Title = "A study of navigational support provided by two {World Wide
Web} browsing applications"
,BookTitle = {HYPERTEXT '96: Proceedings of the the seventh ACM
conference on Hypertext}
,Year = 1996
,Pages = 161#"--"#169
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/234828.234844"
,SeeAlso="Tabbing from HT2010 \cite{Hu:PBW}
and Tabbing from CHI2010 \cite{Du:STBM}"
}
@InBook{Ma:SpRepCog
,Author="D. M. Mark"
,Title="Spatial representation: a cognitive view"
,Chapter=7 ,Volume=1 ,Pages=81#"--"#89
,BookTitle="Geographical Information Systems: Principles and
applications"
,CROSSREF="Ma:GISpa"
}
@Article{Ca:IRuHTHS
,Author="F. Campagoni and K. Ehrlich"
,Title="Information retrieval using a hypertext-based help system"
,Journal=tois ,Volume=7 ,Number=8 ,Pages=271#"--"#291, Year=1989
}
@Article{Hu:AcINJ
,Author="Larry Hull"
,Title="It's Not Just for Disabilities Any More"
,Month=mar#" + "#apr ,Year=2004 ,Pages=36#"--"#41
,Journal=int
,Keyword="\K{Navigation!Lostness} $\bullet$ \K{WWW} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!cultural factors!hearing-impaired users} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@Article{Do:FoS
,Author = "Paul Douglas"
,Title = "The future of search"
,Journal="Practical Webdesign"
,Month=feb ,Year=2009 ,Pages = 36#"--"#41
,Note="Number 185 (no volume \#)"
,Keyword="\K{information search} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW!Search}"
}
@Article{Ge:AMi
,Author="Don Gentner and Jakob Nielsen"
,Title="The Anti-Mac interface"
,Journal=cacm ,volume=39 ,Number=8 ,Pages=70#"--"#82
,Year=1996
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/232014.232032"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@Article{Pr:Cybercrime
,Author="Niels Provos and Moheeb Abu Rajab and Panayiotis Mavrommatis"
,Title="Cybercrime 2.0"
,Journal=cacm ,Volume=52 ,Number=4 ,Year=2009 ,Pages=42#"--"#47
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1498765.1498782"
,Keyword="\K{System!WWW} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
,SeeAlso="Randal Schwatrz on avoiding SQL attacks in WWW forms
\cite{Sc:SQLia,Sc:PWFC}"
}
@Article{Sc:SQLia
,Author="Randal Schwartz"
,Title="Avoiding {SQL} Injection Attacks"
,Journal="Unix Review"
,Month=may ,Year=2005
,URL="http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/UnixReview/col58.html"
,Keyword="\K{System!WWW} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
}
@Article{Sc:PWFC
,Author="Randal Schwartz"
,Title="Processing {Web} Forms Carefully"
,Journal="Linux Magazine"
,Month=sep ,Year=2002
,URL="http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/LinuxMag/col40.html"
,Keyword="\K{System!WWW} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
}
@Article{vanO:Juvina
,Author = "van Oostendorp, Herre and Ion Juvina"
,Title = "Using a cognitive model to generate Web navigation support"
,Journal = ijhcs ,volume=65 ,number=10 ,pages= 887#"--"#897
,year=2007 ,month=oct
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2007.06.004"
,Abstract="A computational cognitive model of web navigation is
proposed. Based on theories and models of text comprehension and
web navigation, the plausibility of the proposed model is
discussed. The model was used to generate navigation support and
this support was offered to users in real time during their
navigation sessions, in two experiments. In the first experiment
navigation support was offered in the auditory modality and it had
a positive effect on user's task performance, especially for users
with low spatial abilities. In the second experiment navigation
support was offered in the visual modality and users positively
evaluated it. Users navigated in a more structured way, judged the
system as more usable, and perceived themselves as less
disoriented. Support did also here lead to better task
performance. Finally, some aspects concerning further enhancement
of the validity of the proposed model and its practical relevance
are discussed."
,SeeAlso="Juvina' PhD thesis \cite{Ju:DCMNW}"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation!Lostness} $\bullet$
\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability} $\bullet$
\K{HT!System!WWW}"
}
@Article{Ge:StatPower
,Author="Andrew Gelman and David Weakliem"
,Title="Of Beauty, Sex and Power"
,Year=2009 ,Month=jul#"-"#aug
,Journal="American Scientist" ,Volume=97 ,Number=4
,Pages="270, 310--316"
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1511/2009.79.310"
,Abstract="Too little attention has been paid to the statistical
challenges in estimating small effects"
}
@Article{Br:PMDSS
,Author="John Douglas Bradley"
,Title="Pliny: {A} model for digital support of scholarship"
,Journal=JoDI ,Volume=9 ,Number=1 ,Year=2008
,HowPublished="\url{http://journals.tdl.org/jodi/article/view/209}"
,SeeAlso="Jan Olsen's PhD book \cite{Ol:JOPhD} and Taylor's MSc
\cite{Ta:SW}"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@Article{Pu:SCQT
,Author="Hsiao-Tieh Pu and Shui-Lung Chuang and Chyan Yang"
,Year=2002
,Title="Subject Categorization of Query Terms for Exploring Web
Users' Search Interests"
,Journal=jasist ,Volume=53 ,Number=8 ,Pages=617#"--"#630
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/asi.10071"
,Keyword="\K{searching}"
}
@InProceedings{Bo:WTM
,Author="Birgit Bomsdorf"
,Title="The WebTaskModel Approach to Web Process Modelling"
,Pages=240#"--"#253
,BookTitle="Task Models and Diagrams for User Interface Design"
,Year=2007 ,Month="7--9"#nov ,Location="Toulouse, France"
,Annote="Abstract
\begin{quotation}
Task modelling has been entering the development process of web
applications. However, modelling web processes from a
usage-centred perspective is still challenging due to the strong
distinctions of traditional interactive systems and
state-of-the-art web applications. This paper proposes the
WebTaskModel approach, by which task model concepts are adapted
for the purpose of modelling interactive web applications. The
main difference to existing task models is the introduction and
build-time usage of a generic task lifecycle. Hereby the
descriptions of exceptions and error cases of task performance
(caused by, e.g., the stateless protocol or Browser
interactions) are on the one hand appended to the task while, on
the other hand, being clearly separated.
\end{quotation}"
,DOI="10.1007/978-3-540-77222-4\_19"
,URL="http://www.springerlink.com/content/t023mv388303k7w4"
}
@InProceedings{Du:STBM
,Author = "Patrick Dubroy and Ravin Balakrishnan"
,Title = "A study of tabbed browsing among Mozilla Firefox users"
,BookTitle = {CHI '10: Proceedings of the 28th international
conference on Human factors in computing systems}
,Year = 2010
,Pages = 673#"--"#682
,Location = "Atlanta, {GA}"
,URL = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1753326.1753426}
,SeeAlso="History from HT1996 \cite{Jo:SNS2W3}
and Tabbing from HT2010 \cite{Hu:PBW}"
}
@InProceedings{Hu:PBW
,Author = "Jeff Huang and Ryen W. White"
,Title = "Parallel browsing behavior on the Web"
,Pages = 13#"--"#18
,URL = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1810617.1810622}
,BookTitle=HT2010 ,CROSSREF="HT2010" ,Year = 2010
,SeeAlso="History from HT1996 \cite{Jo:SNS2W3}
and Tabbing from CHI2010 \cite{Du:STBM}"
}
@Article{Va:WSGM
,Author="Misha W. Vaughan and Andrew Dillon"
,Title = "Why structure and genre matter for users of digital
information: A longitudinal experiment with readers of a
web-based newspaper"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=64 ,number=6 ,year = 2006 ,month=jun
,pages = 502#"--"#526
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2005.11.002"
,Abstract =
" In an effort to understand the impact of designing for digital
genres on users' mental representations of structure, a two-phase
study was conducted. In phase~1, six expert news readers and a
panel of HCI experts were solicited for input regarding
genre-conforming and genre-violating web news page design,
navigation, and story categorization. In phase~2, a longitudinal
experiment with a group of 25 novice web news readers who were
exposed to one of the two designs over 5 sessions is
reported. During these sessions a variety of user data were
captured, including: comprehension (recall, recognition),
usability (time on task, accuracy, user satisfaction), and
navigation (path length, category node hits).
\newline
The between-group difference of web site design was significant
for comprehension, usability, and navigation with the users of the
genre-conforming design demonstrating better performance. The
within-group difference of time was significant across these three
measures as well, with performance improving over time. No
interaction effect was found between web site design and time on
comprehension or usability. However, a surprising interaction
effect was found on navigation; specifically the breadth of
navigation (i.e. the number of nodes visited for two classes of
tasks) increased over time more dramatically for the
genre-violating group than for the genre-conforming group. By
examining the changes in these data over time and between the two
designs, evidence for the development of users' mental
representations of structure was captured."
}
@Article{Pa:CSM
,Author= "Stephen J. Payne and William R. Reader"
,Title= "Constructing structure maps of multiple on-line texts"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=64 ,number=6 ,year = 2006 ,month=may
,Pages = 461#"--"#474
,URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2005.09.003}
,Abstract="We propose that in many contexts of text use, people need
to consult a mental representation of the mapping between the
content of documents and their structure. We report three
experiments that investigate the construction and use of such
`structure maps.' In each experiment people read multiple on-line
texts on the same topic, and then searched for specific pieces of
information in those texts. Search performance was compared with
people who had not read the texts. People who had read multiple
texts were, to some extent, able to recall where information was
in the texts as shown by the locations in which they first
searched (Experiments 1 and 2) or the number of pages opened
during a search (Experiment~3). We also found that readers of
multiple texts were able to find facts in those texts faster than
were people who had not read the texts, and that this speedup was
not a simple effect of faster reading while scanning for facts
(Experiments 1 and 2) or of greater familiarity with the general
topic (Experiment~3). These incidental effects of reading occurred
whether or not participants were warned before reading that they
would have subsequently to search the texts and were not
compromised by transformations in the appearance of text (double
column to single column) that disrupted the positions of facts on
pages (Experiment~2). We conclude that readers spontaneously
construct structure maps of multiple electronic texts, even when
their reading goal stresses abstraction of meaning across
sources. Structure maps likely play a vital role in many aspects
of text use, such as re-reading and knowledge updating, so that
their support is an important consideration in the design of
on-line texts."
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Ch:WDWU
,Author = "Aline Chevalier and Maud Kicka"
,Title = "Web designers and web users: Influence of the ergonomic
quality of the web site on the information search"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=64 ,number=10 ,year = 2006 ,month=oct
,Pages = 1031#"--"#1048
,URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2006.06.002}
,Abstract="Despite rapid growth in the number of web sites, there is
still a significant number of ergonomic problems which hinder web
users. Many studies focus on analysing cognitive processes and
difficulties experienced by web users, but very few are
interested in web designers' difficulties or in comparing their
respective activities. Towards this end, the two experimental
studies presented in this article compare the strategies
developed both by professional web designers and (novice
vs. experienced) web users while searching for information on web
sites of varying ergonomic quality. More precisely, we
investigated whether web designers can effectively use their own
strategies as web users when designing web sites. We presented a
comparison of novice web users, experienced web users and
professional web designers searching behavior and cognitive load
when using ergonomic and non-ergonomic web sites. In addition, we
asked web designers to predict the strategy used by novice web
users. Based on the results obtained in the two experiments, we
conclude that web designers are not able to predict strategies of
novice users and do not behave like novice users. Consequently,
ways for supporting web designers in developing a user-centered
activity are necessary, and certain ways are suggested at the end
of this article."
}
@Article{Mancini20061154
,Author = "Clara Mancini and {Buckingham Shum}, Simon J."
,Title = "Modelling discourse in contested domains: A semiotic and
cognitive framework"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=64 ,number=11 ,year=2006 ,month=nov
,Pages = 1154 #"--"#1171
,URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2006.07.002}
,Abstract = "This paper examines the representational requirements
for interactive, collaborative systems intended to support
sensemaking and argumentation over contested issues. We argue
that a perspective supported by semiotic and cognitively oriented
discourse analyses offers both theoretical insights and motivates
representational requirements for the semantics of tools for
contesting meaning. We introduce our semiotic approach,
highlighting its implications for discourse representation,
before describing a research system (ClaiMaker) designed to
support the construction of scholarly argumentation by allowing
analysts to publish and contest [`]claims' about scientific
contributions. We show how ClaiMaker's representational scheme is
grounded in specific assumptions concerning the nature of
explicit modelling, and the evolution of meaning within a
discourse community. These characteristics allow the system to
represent scholarly discourse as a dynamic process, in the form
of continuously evolving structures. A cognitively oriented
discourse analysis then shows how the use of a small set of
cognitive relational primitives in the underlying ontology opens
possibilities for offering users advanced forms of computational
service for analysing collectively constructed argumentation
networks."
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@Article{Da:IMinHLE
,Author = "Prabu David and Mei Song and Andrew Hayes
and Eric S. Fredin"
,Title = "A cyclic model of information seeking in hyperlinked
environments: The role of goals, self-efficacy, and intrinsic
motivation"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=65 ,number=2 ,year=2007 ,month=feb
,Pages = 170 #"--"#182
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2006.09.004"
,Abstract = "To examine the emergent properties of information
seeking in hyperlinked environments, in this paper we developed
a cyclic model. Using this model as a framework, the
relationships among perceived goal difficulty, goal success, and
self-efficacy were examined. Self-efficacy was conceptualized as
a mediating mechanism and intrinsic motivation (IM) in the task
was examined as a moderator. Data were collected as repeated
measures over 20 cycles during an hour-long session of
information seeking when students were given that task of
designing a travel plan for a trip to China. The findings
suggest that success in meeting information goals in one cycle
resulted in an increase in self-efficacy, which in turn reduced
the perceived difficulty of information goals in the upcoming
cycle. At the same time, self-efficacy from previous cycles
seemed to provide the impetus for formulating more challenging
information goals in subsequent cycles. Besides this dual role
of self-efficacy, the moderating role of IM was also
evident. For participants relatively high in baseline IM for the
task, the link between self-efficacy and goal success was
weaker. However, for participants with relatively low levels of
baseline IM for the task, goal success has a stronger effect on
self-efficacy."
}
@Article{Le:WCAG4B
,Author = "Stefan Leuthold and Javier A. Bargas-Avila
and Klaus Opwis"
,Title = "Beyond Web content accessibility guidelines: Design of
enhanced text user interfaces for blind internet users"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=66 ,number=4 ,year=2008 ,month=apr
,Pages = 257#"--"#270
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2007.10.006"
,Abstract = "Websites do not become usable just because their
content is accessible. For people who are blind, the application
of the W3C's Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) often
might not even make a significant difference in terms of
efficiency, errors or satisfaction in website usage. This paper
documents the development of nine guidelines to construct an
enhanced text user interface (ETI) as an alternative to the
graphical user interface (GUI). An experimental design with 39
blind participants executing a search and a navigation task on a
website showed that with the ETI, blind users executed the search
task significantly faster, committing fewer mistakes, rating it
significantly better on subjective scales as well as when compared
to the GUIs from other websites they had visited. However,
performance did not improve with the ETI on the navigation task,
the main reason presumed to be labeling problems. We conclude that
the ETI is an improvement over the GUI, but that it cannot help in
overcoming one major weakness of most websites: If users do not
understand navigation labels, even the best user interface cannot
help them navigate."
,Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors!blind users} $\bullet$
\K{Navigation}"
}
@Article{vSc:RCPA
,Author = "Paul van Schaik and Jonathan Ling"
,Title = "The role of context in perceptions of the aesthetics of
web pages over time"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=67 ,number=1 ,year=2009 ,month=jan
,Pages = 79#"--"#89
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2008.09.012"
,Abstract = "An important aspect of the empirical study of user
experience is the process by which users form aesthetic and
other judgements of interactive products. The current study
extends previous research by presenting test users with a
context (mode of use) in which to make their judgements, using
sets of web pages from specific domains rather than unrelated
pages, studying the congruence of perceptions of aesthetic value
over time, including judgements after use of a web site,
manipulating the aesthetic design of web pages and studying the
relationship between usability and aesthetic value. The results
from two experiments demonstrate that context increases the
stability of judgements from perceptions after brief exposure to
those after self-paced exposure and from perceptions after
self-paced exposure to those of after site use. Experiment~1
shows that relatively attractive pages are preferred over
relatively unattractive pages after brief exposure, but only if
no context is provided. Experiment 2 shows that after brief
exposure, classically aesthetic pages that are information
oriented are rated as more attractive than expressively
aesthetic pages. Perceptions are not correlated with measures of
task performance or mental effort. We conclude that context is a
pivotal factor influencing the stability of users' perceptions,
which must be explicitly addressed in the study of users'
product experience. Furthermore, the type of aesthetics that is
relevant to users' perceptions appears to depend on the
application domain. The principle [`]what is beautiful is
usable' is not confirmed."
,SeeAlso="Aesthetics and Usability \cite{Br:AaU} and
What makes a website popular \cite{Ka:WMWP}"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!website reputation / value assessment}"
}
@Article{Sc:DPLP
,Author = "P. Schmutz and S.P. Roth and M. Seckler and K. Opwis"
,Title = "Designing product listing pages---Effects on sales and
users' cognitive workload"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=68 ,number=7 ,year=2010 ,month=jul
,Pages = 423#"--"#431
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2010.02.001"
,Abstract = "Product listing pages, where information on multiple
products are displayed, represent a vital point of an E-commerce
website on which consumer decisions are made. Prior research has
shown that the design of product listing pages has an impact on
users' performance and their recall of brand names. The aim of
this study was to examine effects of presentation on cognitive
load and consumer decisions. An online study was conducted
comparing presentation type (matrix versus list
presentation). List presentation was associated with lower
cognitive load and more economic product selections. Eye-tracking
data from an additional laboratory experiment suggest that list
presentation triggers comparison processes which could account
for the differences found."
}
@Article{Gs:ESEIR
,Author = "Theresia Gschwandtner and Katharina Kaiser and Patrick
Martini and Silvia Miksch"
,Title = "Easing semantically enriched information retrieval---An
interactive semi-automatic annotation system for medical documents"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=68 ,number=6 ,year=2010 ,month=jun
,Pages = 370#"--"#385
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2009.08.002"
,note = "Human-Computer Interaction for Medicine and Health care
(HCI4MED): Towards making Information usable"
,Abstract = " Mapping medical concepts from a terminology system to
the concepts in the narrative text of a medical document is
necessary to provide semantically accurate information for
further processing steps. The MetaMap Transfer (MMTx) program is
a semantic annotation system that generates a rough mapping of
concepts from the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS)
Metathesaurus to free medical text, but this mapping still
contains erroneous and ambiguous bits of information. Since
manually correcting the mapping is an extremely cumbersome and
time-consuming task, we have developed the MapFace editor.
\newline
The editor provides a convenient way of navigating the
annotated information gained from information on both a
conceptual and a syntactical level, and thus it greatly
facilitates the handling of the MMTx program. Additionally, the
editor provides enhanced visualization features to support the
correct interpretation of medical concepts within the text. We
paid special attention to ensure that the MapFace editor is an
intuitive and convenient tool to work with. Therefore, we
recently conducted a usability study in order to create a well
founded background serving as a starting point for further
improvement of the editor's usability."
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@article{Lai201041
,Author = "Chien-Yin Lai and Pai-Hsun Chen and Sheng-Wen Shih and
Yili Liu and Jen-Shin Hong"
,Title = "Computational models and experimental investigations of
effects of balance and symmetry on the aesthetics of
text-overlaid images"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=68 ,number="1--2" ,year=2010 ,month=jan#"/"#feb
,Pages = 41#"--"#56
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2009.08.008"
,Abstract = "This article describes computational models based on
principles of visual weights to compute the symmetry and balance
of text-overlaid images. Two experiments were conducted to
investigate the effects of symmetry and balance on the aesthetic
appeal of text-overlaid images. In the first experiment, five
color photos were used to compose a set of test images overlaid
with a paragraph of Chinese texts as the stimuli. Contrastly, the
second experiment applied monochrome photos to compute the
stimuli. The positions of the text overlay were determined by
varying the balance and symmetry in order to validate
computational aesthetic quantification algorithms with subjective
ratings. The stimuli were rated by 20 subjects in each experiment
using the ratio-scale magnitude estimation method against a
benchmark image for each photo. Results from both experiments
show that subjects are adept at judging symmetry and balance in
both the horizontal and vertical directions. Subjects are also
adept at judging radial symmetry about the center point of an
image. The experiments also established a relationship between a
higher averaged visual balance and the aesthetic appeal of
text-overlaid images. Symmetry in either direction, however, did
not result in any proportional relations to the aesthetic
appeal."
}
@Article{Cy:CAWD
,Author = "Dianne Cyr and Milena Head and Hector Larios"
,Title="Colour appeal in website design within and across cultures:
A multi-method evaluation"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=68 ,number="1--2" ,year=2010 ,month=jan#"/"#feb
,Pages = 1#"--"#21
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2009.08.005"
,Abstract = "Colour has the potential to elicit emotions or
behaviors, yet there is little research in which colour
treatments in website design are systematically tested. Little is
known about how colour affects trust or satisfaction on the part
of the viewer. Although the Internet is increasingly global, few
systematic studies have been undertaken in which the impact of
colour on culturally diverse viewers is investigated in website
design. In this research three website colour treatments are
tested across three culturally distinct viewer groups for their
impact on user trust, satisfaction, and e-loyalty. To gather
data, a rich multi-method approach is used including
eye-tracking, a survey, and interviews. Results reveal that
website colour appeal is a significant determinant for website
trust and satisfaction with differences noted across
cultures. The findings have practical value for web marketers and
interface designers concerning effective colour use in website
development."
,Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!colour}"
}
@InCollection {Ag:ADLC
,Author = "Maristella Agosti and Nicola Ferro and Ingo Frommholz and
Ulrich Thiel"
,Title = "Annotations in Digital Libraries and Collaboratories – Facets,
Models and Usage"
,BookTitle = "Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries"
,Series = LNCS ,Volume = 3232 ,Year =2004 ,Pages = 244#"--"#255
,Editor = "Rachel Heery and Liz Lyon"
,Publisher = "Springer Berlin / Heidelberg"
,URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-30230-8_23}
,Abstract = "This paper presents the results of our study regarding the
different facets and ways of using annotations in both digital
libraries and collaboratories. This study represents an innovative
attempt at gathering methodological tools and synergies from both
fields in order to effectively define a comprehensive model for
annotations. Thus we propose a conceptual model for annotations in
order to develop an annotation service that can be plugged into
digital libraries and collaboratories. Finally, starting from our
model, we introduce a search strategy for exploiting annotations in
order to search and retrieve relevant documents for a user query."
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@Article{Mu:CGBoB
,Author="Gerald M. Murch"
,Title="Colour Graphics --- Blessing or Ballyhoo?"
,Journal="Computer Graphics Forum"
,Volume=4 ,Number=2 ,Pages=127#"--"#135
,Year=1985 ,Month=jun
,DOI="10.1111/j.1467-8659.1985.tb00202.x"
,Annote="See especially \S5 (Guidelines for Effective Colour Usage)
pages 133--134"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!colour}"
}
@InProceedings{Na:CP
,Author = "Frank Nack and Amit Manniesing and Lynda Hardman"
,Title = "Colour picking: the pecking order of form and function"
,Booktitle = "Proceedings of the eleventh {ACM} international conference
on Multimedia"
,Year = 2003
,Pages = 279#"--"#282
,DOI = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/957013.957071"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!colour}"
}
@InProceedings{Hs:VALA
,Author = "I-Han Hsiao and Peter Brusilovsky and Michael Yudelson and
Alvaro Ortigosa"
,Title = "The value of adaptive link annotation in e-learning: a
study of a portal-based approach"
,BookTitle = "{HT} '10: Proceedings of the 21st {ACM} conference on
Hypertext and hypermedia"
,Year = 2010
,Pages = 223#"--"#228
,URL = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1810617.1810657}
}
@InProceedings{Jo:KHKW
,Author = "David H. Jonassen and Philip Henning"
,Title = "Mental models: knowledge in the head and knowledge in the
world"
,BookTitle = "Proceedings of the 1996 international conference on
Learning sciences ({ICLS '96})"
,Year = 1996
,Pages = 433#"--"#438
,ISBN = "1-880094-23-1"
,Location = "Evanston, {IL}"
,Publisher = "International Society of the Learning Sciences"
,Annote="Abstract
\begin{quotation}
Better understanding learners' mental models will help us to assess
advanced knowledge and problem solving skills acquired while
interacting with constructivist learning environments. Mental models
are the internal, conceptual and operational representations that
humans develop while interacting with complex systems. In this paper,
we argue that they are also embedded in the activities engaged in by
a community of practice, the social relations among members of that
community, the discourse used by that community to negotiate meaning,
and in the artifacts that are used and produced by the community
during their activity. This paper describes two studies: one aimed at
eliciting mental models in the heads of novice refrigeration
technicians and the other an ethnographic study eliciting knowledge
and models in the community of experienced refrigeration technicians.
\end{quotation}"
,Keyword="\K{CS3160 (UID)}"
}
@Article{Ma:HFRHI
,Title="Hypertext fiction reading: haptics and immersion"
,Author="Anne Mangen"
,Journal="Journal of Research in Reading" ,ISSN="0141-0423"
,Volume=31, Number=4,Year=2008, Pages=404#"--"#419
,DOI="10.1111/j.1467-9817.2008.00380.x"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@InCollection{Ma:DLRHW
,Author="Anne Mangen and Jean-Luc Velay"
,Title="Digitizing Literacy: Reflections on the Haptics of Writing"
,Chapter=20 ,Pages=385#"--"#401
,BookTitle="Advances in Haptics" ,CROSSREF={Za:AiH}
,Annote="Compare with Piolat et al.'s Cognitive Effort during Note
Taking \cite{Pi:CEDNT}"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@Article{Ag:FMADC
,author = "Maristella Agosti and Nicola Ferro"
,title = "A formal model of annotations of digital content"
,journal=TOIS ,volume=26 ,issue=1 ,month=nov ,year=2007
,articleno = {3}
,url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1292591.1292594}
,doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1292591.1292594}
,publisher = {ACM}
,address = {New York, NY, USA}
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@Article{Pi:CEDNT
,Author="Annie Piolat and Thierry Olive and Ronald T. Kellogg"
,Title="Cognitive Effort during Note Taking"
,Journal="Applied Cognitive Psychology"
,Volume=19 ,Pages=291#"--"#312 ,Year=2005
,DOI="10.1002/acp.1086"
,Annote="Compare with Mangen and Velay's Digitizing Literacy:
Reflections on the Haptics of Writing \cite{Ma:DLRHW}"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@Article{Qa:AMME
,Author = "Asim Qayyum"
,Title = "Analysing Markings Made on E-Documents"
,Journal = "Canadian Journal of Information \& Library Sciences"
,ISSN ="1195096X"
,Year=2008 ,Volume=32 ,Number="1/2" ,Pages=35#"--"#53
,Abstract = "\begin{quotation}This exploratory study examines the
patterns of university students' textual markings made when
interacting with electronic documents. During active reading,
students read research articles for self-learning and instruction
in their individual study areas. E-documents were examined to
determine the kinds of information marked by the students, as
well as the document-marking approaches. Descriptive and
inferential statistical tests were used to analyse the data and
to determine the differences between marking patterns. The
results provide a very favourable set of user-interaction
taxonomies and research directions on which we intend to build a
future human-document interaction (HDI) research platform. The
results of this study also provide guidelines that digital
library system developers may adapt to build better
reading/marking applications.\end{quotation}"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@Article {Wo:ACDL
,Author = "Joanna Wolfe"
,Title = "Annotations and the collaborative digital library: Effects of
an aligned annotation interface on student argumentation and reading
strategies"
,Journal = "International Journal of Computer-Supported Collaborative
Learning"
,ISSN = "1556-1607"
,Year=2008 ,Volume=3 ,Number=2 ,Pages = 141#"--"#164
,URL = "\url{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11412-008-9040-x}"
,DOI = {10.1007/s11412-008-9040-x}
,Abstract = "Recent research on annotation interfaces provides
provocative evidence that anchored, annotation-based discussion
environments may lead to better conversations about a text. However,
annotation interfaces raise complicated tradeoffs regarding screen
real estate and positioning. It is argued that solving this screen
real estate problem requires limiting the number of annotations
displayed to users. In order to understand which annotations have the
most learning value for students, this paper presents two
complementary studies examining the effects of annotations on students
performing a reading-to-write task. The first study used think-aloud
protocols and a within-subjects methodology, finding that annotations
appeared to provoke students to reflect more critically upon the
primary text. This effect was particularly strong when students
encountered pairs of annotations presenting different viewpoints on
the same section of text. Student interviews suggested that
annotations were most helpful when they caused the reader to consider
and weigh conflicting viewpoints. The second study used a
between-subjects methodology and a more naturalistic task to provide
complementary evidence that annotations encourage more reflective
responses to a text. This study found that students who received
annotated materials both perceived themselves and were perceived by
instructors as less reliant on unreflective summary strategies than
students who received the same content but in a different
format. These findings indicate that the learning value of an
annotation lies in its ability to provoke students to consider and
weigh new perspectives on the primary text. When selected effectively,
annotations provide a critical scaffolding that can support students’
critical thinking and argumentation activities. Collaborative digital
libraries and applications for the Web 2.0 should be designed with
this learning framework in mind."
}
@Article{Wo:FMCFA
,Title="From the Margins to the Center: The Future of Annotation"
,Author="Joanna L. Wolfe and Christine M. Neuwirth"
,Journal="Journal of Business and Technical Communication"
,Year=2001 ,Month=jul ,Volume=15 ,Number=3 ,Pages=333#"--"#371
,DOI="10.1177/105065190101500304"
,URL="http://jbt.sagepub.com/content/15/3/333"
,SeeAlso="p.\,326:
Wright's To Jump or Not To Jump \cite{Wr:jump} for more on form"
,Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{System!XLibris}"
}
@Article{Br:OCVE
,Author="John Bradley and Paul Vetch"
,Title="Supporting Annotation as a Scholarly Tool---Experiences
From the Online Chopin Variorum Edition"
,Journal="Literary and Linguistic Computing"
,Year=2007 ,Volume=22 ,Number=2 ,Pages=225#"--"#241
,DOI="10.1093/llc/fqm001"
,URL="http://llc.oxfordjournals.org/content/22/2/225.full"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InCollection{deB:RRL
,Author="R. de Beauregard"
,Title="Readers Responding to Literature: Coming to Grips with
Reality"
,Pages=192#"--"#210
,BookTitle="Reader Response to Literature: The Empirical Dimension"
,Editor="Elaine F. Narduccio"
,Address="The Hague"
,Publisher="Mouton de Gruyter"
,Year=1992
}
@Article{Go:IER
,Author="Ernest T. Goertz and Mark Sadoski and Michael L. Stowe and
Thomas G. Fetsco and Susan G. Kemp"
,Title="Imagery and Emotional Response in Reading: Quantitative and
qualitative analyses"
,Journal="Poetics" ,Year=1993
,Volume=22 ,Number="1--2" ,Month=sep ,Pages=35#"--"#49
,DOI="10.1016/0304-422X(93)90019-D"
}
@Book{Cr:TPR
,Author="R. G. Crowder and R. K. Wagner"
,Title="The Psychology of Reading: An Introduction"
,Edition="second" ,Year=1992
,Publisher="Oxford University Press"
,Address="Oxford, UK"
}
@Article{Kn:ELTC
,Author="E. W. E. M. Kneepkens and R. A. Zwaan"
,Title="Emotions and Literary Text Comprehension"
,Journal="Poetics" ,Year=1993
,Volume=23 ,Number="1--2" ,Month=jan ,pages=125#"--"#138
,DOI="10.1016/0304-422X(94)00021-W"
}
@Article{Br:SAST
,Author="John Bradley and Paul Vetch"
,Title="Supporting Annotation as a Scholarly Tool—Experiences From
the Online Chopin Variorum Edition"
,Journal="Literary and Linguistic Computing"
,Year=2007 ,Volume=22 ,Number=2 ,Pages=225#"--"#241
,DOI="10.1093/llc/fqm001"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Go:RiO
,Author = "Gene Golovchinsky"
,Title = "Reading in the office"
,BookTitle = "Proc. of the 2008 ACM workshop on Research advances in
large digital book repositories"
,Series = {BooksOnline '08}
,Year = 2008
,Location = "Napa Valley, {CA}, {USA}"
,Pages = 21#"--"#24
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1458412.1458420"
,doi = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1458412.1458420"
,publisher = {ACM}
,address = "New York, {NY}, {USA}"
}
@Article{Do:CCUW
,Author="Ying Dong and Kun-Pyo Lee"
,Title="A cross-cultural comparative study of users' perceptions of
a webpage: With a focus on the cognitive styles of Chinese,
Koreans and Americans"
,Year=2008
,Journal="International Journal of Design"
,Volume=2 ,Number=2 ,Pages=19#"--"#30
,Keyword="\K{HCI!cultural factors} $\bullet$ \K{eye-tracking}
$\bullet$ \K{HT!System!WWW} $\bullet$ \K{cognitive style}"
}
@Article{Wo:HTAoM
,Author="Janine Wong and Peter Storkerson"
,Title="Hypertext and the Art of Memory"
,Journal="Visible Language"
,Volume=31 ,Number=2 ,Pages=126#" -- "#157
,URL="http://trex.id.iit.edu/visiblelanguage/Feature_Articles/ArtofMemory/ArtofMemory.html"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@inproceedings{Lo:ESUNDT,
author = {Loizides, Fernando and Buchanan, George},
title = {An empirical study of user navigation during document triage},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 13th European conference on Research and advanced technology for digital libraries},
series = {ECDL'09},
year = {2009},
isbn = {3-642-04345-3, 978-3-642-04345-1},
location = {Corfu, Greece},
pages = {138--149},
numpages = {12},
url = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1812799.1812820},
acmid = {1812820},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag},
address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
}
@inproceedings{Pe:IADD,
author = {Pearson, Jennifer and Buchanan, George and Thimbleby, Harold},
title = {Improving annotations in digital documents},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 13th European conference on Research and advanced technology for digital libraries},
series = {ECDL'09},
year = {2009},
isbn = {3-642-04345-3, 978-3-642-04345-1},
location = {Corfu, Greece},
pages = {429--432},
numpages = {4},
url = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1812799.1812863},
acmid = {1812863},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag},
address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
keyword = {annotation, digital documents, document triage},
}
@InCollection {Bl:MSM
,Author = "James Blustein and David Rowe and Ann-Barbara Graff"
,Title = "Making Sense in the Margins: A Field Study of Annotation"
,BookTitle = "Research and Advanced Technology for Digital
Libraries Proceedings of the International Conference on Theory
and Practice of Digital Libraries, {TPDL} 2011, Berlin, Germany,
September 26--28, 2011"
,Series = LNCS ,Volume = 6966 ,Pages = 252#"--"#259
,Editor = "Stefan Gradmann and Francesca Borri and Carlo Meghinilo
and Heiko Schuldt"
,Publisher = "Springer Berlin / Heidelberg" ,Year = 2011
,ISBN = "978-3-642-24468-1"
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-24469-8_27"
,Keyword = "\K{Annotation}"
}
@article{Somervell2005592,
title = "Better discount evaluation: illustrating how critical parameters support heuristic creation",
journal = "Interacting with Computers",
volume = "17",
number = "5",
pages = "592 - 612",
year = "2005",
note = "Social Impact of Emerging Technologies",
issn = "0953-5438",
doi = "10.1016/j.intcom.2005.03.007",
url = "http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0953543805000275",
author = "Jacob Somervell and D. Scott McCrickard",
keywords = "Heuristics",
keywords = "Evaluation",
keywords = "Notification systems",
keywords = "Critical parameters",
abstract = "This paper describes a heuristic creation process based on the notion of critical parameters, and a comparison experiment that demonstrates the utility of heuristics created for a specific system class. We focus on two examples of using the newly created heuristics to illustrate the utility of the usability evaluation method, as well as to provide support for the creation process, and we report on successes and frustrations of two classes of users, novice evaluators and domain experts, who identified usability problems with the new heuristics. We argue that establishing critical parameters for other domains will support efforts in creating tailored evaluation tools."
}
@article{Lewis:2006:SSU:1167948.1167973,
author = {Lewis, James R.},
title = {Sample sizes for usability tests: mostly math, not magic},
journal = {interactions},
volume = {13},
issue = {6},
month = {November},
year = {2006},
issn = {1072-5520},
pages = {29--33},
numpages = {5},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1167948.1167973},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1167948.1167973},
acmid = {1167973},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
}
@Article{Re:Sro
,Author="Renear, A. H. and Palmer C. L."
,Year= 2009
,Title="Strategic reading, ontologies, and the future of scientific publishing"
,Journal="Science" ,Volume=325 ,Number=5942 ,Pages=828#" -- "#832
,Note="See correction to figure caption v.\,326 n.\,5950 p.\,230
(DOI:10.1126/science.326\_230a)"
,Keyword = "\K{Annotation}"
}
@inproceedings{Wu:2008:TPD:1347390.1347414,
author = {Wu, Chih-Sung (Andy) and Robinson, Susan J. and Mazalek, Ali},
title = {Turning a page on the digital annotation of physical books},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Tangible and embedded interaction},
series = {TEI '08},
year = {2008},
isbn = {978-1-60558-004-3},
location = {Bonn, Germany},
pages = {109--116},
numpages = {8},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1347390.1347414},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1347390.1347414},
acmid = {1347414},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
Keyword = "\K{Annotation}"
keywords = {CSCW, annotation, augmented books, augmented reality, computer vision, electronic books, fingertip detection, gestural input, human-computer interaction, hypermedia, paper-based user interface, tangible user interface, wiki},
}
@Article{Pi:CENT
,Author="Annie Piolat and Thierry Olive and Ronald T. Kellog"
,Title="Cognitive Effort during Note Taking"
,Journal="Applied Cognitive Psychology"
,Year=2005 ,Volume=19 ,Pages=291#"--"#312
,DOI="10.1002/acp.1086"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@incollection {springerlink:10.1007/978-3-642-24469-8_4,
author = {Tsatsaronis, George and Varlamis, Iraklis and Torge, Sunna and Reimann, Matthias and Nørvåg, Kjetil and Schroeder, Michael and Zschunke, Matthias},
affiliation = {Biotechnology Center (BIOTEC), Technische Universität Dresden, Germany},
title = {How to Become a Group Leader? or Modeling Author Types Based on Graph Mining},
booktitle = {Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries},
series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
editor = {Gradmann, Stefan and Borri, Francesca and Meghini, Carlo and Schuldt, Heiko},
publisher = {Springer Berlin / Heidelberg},
isbn = {978-3-642-24468-1},
keyword = {Computer Science},
pages = {15-26},
volume = {6966},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-24469-8_4},
note = {10.1007/978-3-642-24469-8_4},
abstract = {Bibliographic databases are a prosperous field for data mining research and social network analysis. The representation and visualization of bibliographic databases as graphs and the application of data mining techniques can help us uncover interesting knowledge regarding how the publication records of authors evolve over time. In this paper we propose a novel methodology to model bibliographical databases as Power Graphs , and mine them in an unsupervised manner, in order to learn basic author types and their properties through clustering. The methodology takes into account the evolution of the co-authorship information, the volume of published papers over time, as well as the impact factors of the venues hosting the respective publications. As a proof of concept of the applicability and scalability of our approach, we present experimental results in the DBLP data.},
year = {2011},
annote="Great visuals. Interesting paper too. Attended session at {TPDL11}"
}
@article{Dow:2011:PPA:1962438.1962451,
author = {Dow, Steven},
title = {How prototyping practices affect design results},
journal = {interactions},
issue_date = {May + June 2011},
volume = {18},
issue = {3},
month = {May},
year = {2011},
issn = {1072-5520},
pages = {54--59},
numpages = {6},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1962438.1962451},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1962438.1962451},
acmid = {1962451},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
}
@inproceedings{Russell:1993:CSS:169059.169209,
author = {Russell, Daniel M. and Stefik, Mark J. and Pirolli, Peter and Card, Stuart K.},
title = {The cost structure of sensemaking},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the INTERACT '93 and CHI '93 conference on Human factors in computing systems},
series = {CHI '93},
year = {1993},
isbn = {0-89791-575-5},
location = {Amsterdam, The Netherlands},
pages = {269--276},
numpages = {8},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/169059.169209},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/169059.169209},
acmid = {169209},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
keywords = {cost structure, information access, learning loop, representation search, representation shift, sensemaking},
annote = "
`Sensemaking is the process of searching for a representation and encoding data in that representation to answer task-specific questions.' (p.\,269)
`Representation design is central to the sensemaking enterprise.' (p.\,276)"
}
@inproceedings{Qu:2005:SSS:1056808.1057074,
author = {Qu, Yan and Furnas, George W.},
title = {Sources of structure in sensemaking},
booktitle = {CHI '05 extended abstracts on Human factors in computing systems},
series = {CHI EA '05},
year = {2005},
isbn = {1-59593-002-7},
location = {Portland, OR, USA},
pages = {1989--1992},
numpages = {4},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1056808.1057074},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1056808.1057074},
acmid = {1057074},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
keywords = {information seeking, representations, sensemaking},
annote = "\begin{quotation}
Sensemaking arises when people face new problems or
unfamiliar situations, anywhere their current knowledge is
insufficient [4]. It involves finding the important
structure in a seemingly unstructured
situation. Therefore, Russell et al. [9] describe
sensemaking as a process of developing successively more
sophisticated representations and using them to organize
information in service of a task. Information is sought
and encoded into an existing task representation. If
information that does not fit (“residue”) leads to
sufficient problems, a search is undertaken for a better
representation. The new representation is then used for
encoding information, until sufficient residue again
builds up and yet a better representation is needed, or
finally the task can be satisfactorily accomplished.
\newline
The Russell et al. approach puts a useful focus on
representations.
\ldots
Sensemaking refers to a wide range of activities.
\end{quotation} (p.\,1989)"
}
@inproceedings{Ryder:2010:LPS:1868914.1868962,
author = {Ryder, Brendan and Anderson, Terry},
title = {Lightweight personal sensemaking tools for the web},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 6th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction: Extending Boundaries},
series = {NordiCHI '10},
year = {2010},
isbn = {978-1-60558-934-3},
location = {Reykjavik, Iceland},
pages = {413--421},
numpages = {9},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1868914.1868962},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1868914.1868962},
acmid = {1868962},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
keywords = {personal information management, personal sensemaking, representation construction, tagging},
annote = "\begin{quotation}
Sensemaking is an ill-defined, iterative and complex
activity concerned with the way people approach the
process of collecting, organizing and creating
representations of information. The user needs to be
supported in two cognitive tasks: „representation
construction‟, which involves finding an appropriate
structure to aid sensemaking and „encoding‟, which is
populating that structure with meaningful information.
\end{quotation} (p.\,413)\newline See also Figure~1"
}
@inproceedings{Ryder:2009:CWT:1738826.1738877,
author = {Ryder, Brendan and Anderson, Terry},
title = {'Coalesce': a web-based tool for sensemaking},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 21st Annual Conference of the Australian Computer-Human Interaction Special Interest Group: Design: Open 24/7},
series = {OZCHI '09},
year = {2009},
isbn = {978-1-60558-854-4},
location = {Melbourne, Australia},
pages = {289--292},
numpages = {4},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1738826.1738877},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1738826.1738877},
acmid = {1738877},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
keywords = {personal information management, representation construction, sensemaking, tagging},
annote="\begin{quotation}
Sensemaking is “the cycle of pursuing, discovering, and
assimilating information during which we change our
conceptualization of a problem and our search strategies”
(Bauer, 2002).
\end{quotation} (p.\,289)"
}
@inproceedings{Zhang:2008:CSS:1357054.1357161,
author = {Zhang, Xiaolong and Qu, Yan and Giles, C. Lee and Song, Piyou},
title = {CiteSense: supporting sensemaking of research literature},
booktitle = {Proceeding of the twenty-sixth annual SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems},
series = {CHI '08},
year = {2008},
isbn = {978-1-60558-011-1},
location = {Florence, Italy},
pages = {677--680},
numpages = {4},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1357054.1357161},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1357054.1357161},
acmid = {1357161},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
keywords = {light weight interaction, sensemaking},
annote="\begin{quotation}
Sensemaking arises when people face new problems or
unfamiliar situations and their current knowledge is
insuf- ficient. It involves finding important structures
in a seem- ingly unstructured situation by developing
successively more sophisticated representations and
fitting information into the representations in service of
a task[20].
\end{quotation} (p.\,677)
}
@inproceedings{Paul:2010:UTS:1718918.1718976,
author = {Paul, Sharoda A. and Reddy, Madhu C.},
title = {Understanding together: sensemaking in collaborative information seeking},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2010 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work},
series = {CSCW '10},
year = {2010},
isbn = {978-1-60558-795-0},
location = {Savannah, Georgia, USA},
pages = {321--330},
numpages = {10},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1718918.1718976},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1718918.1718976},
acmid = {1718976},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
keywords = {collaborative information seeking, collaborative sensemaking, emergency department, healthcare},
annote="\begin{quotation}
The term ``sensemaking'' has been used in a variety of
fields. In the information and communication sciences,
Dervin’s [8] ``Sense-making'' methodology examines how
people overcome ``gaps'' in reality by constructing bridges
consisting of ideas, thoughts, emotions, feelings, and
memories. In the field of HCI, sensemaking has focused on
how users understand complex information spaces or large
document collections [25]. Here, sensemaking is the
process of encoding information into external
representations to answer complex, task-specific
questions. Sensemaking has been examined in a number of
other domains ranging from education [26] to
organizational sciences [33]. Weick [33] defines
sensemaking as an effort to create order when the current
state of the world is perceived as different from the
expected state. People organize their world to make sense
of situations and enact this sense back into the world.
\newline
In spite of the varied perspectives on sensemaking, there
are three salient characteristics of the sensemaking
literature. First, sensemaking is about meaning generation
and understanding. It is a cognitive activity that is part
of, but distinct from, other cognitive activities like
decision- making, problem-solving, comprehension,
creativity, mental modeling, and awareness [14]. Second,
sensemaking is an important aspect of information seeking
tasks. Most of the models and theories of sensemaking have
described it in the context of finding, understanding, and
using information. For instance, Dervin’s [8] Sense-making
methodology has been applied to a variety of information
seeking studies and prominent models of sensemaking,
(e.g.,[25]) are based on information seeking activities of
information workers. Third, sensemaking has mostly been
viewed as an individual cognitive activity consisting of
iteratively finding information based on an initial
framework; organizing information into frameworks or
representations; refining the representations used based
on new information found; and changing representations or
frameworks in use to fit new information [15, 25].
\end{quotation} (p.\,322)"
}
@Article{Re:EUSeN
,Title="Empirical user studies inform the design of an e-notetaking
and information assimilation system for students in higher education"
,Author="Yolanda Jacobs Reimer and Erin Brimhall and Chen Cao and
Kevin O’Reilly"
,Journal="Computers \& Education" ,Year=2009 ,Month=may
,Volume=52 ,Issue=4 ,pages=893#"-–"#913
,URL="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.compedu.2008.12.013"
,Abstract"\begin{quotation}
The research presented in this paper reaches towards a better
theoretical understanding of how students in higher education
currently take notes, how this process is evolving in the digital
age to include information assimilation, and the kinds of support
students need to be successful with their changing academic
tasks. To gain insight into these questions, we triangulated three
major and distinct user studies. First we interviewed 70 university
students from various disciplines across campus, and we
administered questionnaires to these same students, receiving back
a total of 68. Our second study was based on participant
observation whereby we \"shadowed\" 32 university students for
2--3~h each as they went about their normal academic business
around campus. Lastly, we conducted a broader-based questionnaire
with 280 students from a wider campus demographic than our first
survey. We sought a diverse population for our research, and were
able to include students from the disciplines of Business, English,
Computer Science, Chemistry, Psychology, Pharmacy and Biology in
one or more of the studies. We discovered how closely students are
connected to technology and how they are adapting to changing
expectations, current issues they have completing their academic
tasks, how they view traditional notetaking versus electronic
notetaking, and evidence that they are engaging more and more in
the process of information assimilation. From these results, we
conclude that students in higher education might accomplish certain
tasks more effectively and efficiently with a well-designed
software system that provides access to a centralized set of notes
from different locations on campus and beyond. After identifying
functional requirements for the system we envision, we preview our
initial low-fidelity prototypes, and discuss feedback we gathered
on these designs from a set of user focus groups.
\end{quotation}"
Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@incollection {springerlink:10.1007/978-3-642-29166-1_10,
author = {Allam, Hesham and Blustein, James and Bliemel, Michael and Spiteri, Louise},
title = {Knowledge Contribution in Social Media: Exploring Factors Influencing Social Taggers’ Acceptance towards Contributing and Sharing Tags},
booktitle = {Information Systems, Technology and Management},
series = {Communications in Computer and Information Science},
editor = {Dua, Sumeet and Gangopadhyay, Aryya and Thulasiraman, Parimala and Straccia, Umberto and Shepherd, Michael and Stein, Benno},
publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
isbn = {978-3-642-29166-1},
pages = {112-123},
volume = {285},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-29166-1_10},
year = {2012}
}
@article{Bohli:2011:RPN:1952982.1952986,
author = {Bohli, Jens-Matthias and Pashalidis, Andreas},
title = {Relations among privacy notions},
journal = {ACM Trans. Inf. Syst. Secur.},
issue_date = {May 2011},
volume = {14},
number = {1},
month = jun,
year = {2011},
issn = {1094-9224},
pages = {4:1--4:24},
articleno = {4},
numpages = {24},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1952982.1952986},
doi = {10.1145/1952982.1952986},
acmid = {1952986},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
keywords = {Adversarial model, anonymity, privacy notions, unlinkability},
}
@article{Mi:dogear,
author = {Millen, David and Feinberg, Jonathan and Kerr, Bernard},
title = {Social Bookmarking in the Enterprise},
journal = {Queue},
issue_date = {November 2005},
volume = {3},
number = {9},
month = nov,
year = {2005},
issn = {1542-7730},
pages = {28--35},
numpages = {8},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1105664.1105676},
doi = {10.1145/1105664.1105676},
acmid = {1105676},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
} @InProceedings{Cr:HiL
,Author="Lorrie Faith Cranor"
,Title="A Framework for Reasoning About the Human in the Loop"
,BookTitle="{UPSEC '08} Usability Psychology and Security"
,Year=2008 ,Month=apr ,Location="San Francisco, {CA}"
,Organization="{USENIX}"
,URL="http://static.usenix.org/event/upsec08/tech/full_papers/cranor/cranor.pdf"
}
@Article{Fr:Bibliog,
Title="An Annotated Hypertext Bibliography",
Author="Carl Franklin",
Journal="Online",
Month=mar, Year=1988,
Pages="42 -- 46"
}
@InProceedings{Ka:HMBib89,
Author="Paul Kahn",
Title="Hypermedia Bibliography, 1989",
BookTitle=HTSt, CROSSREF="HTStand", Year=1990,
Pages="249 -- 264"
}
@InBook{Ni:Bib90,
Title="Hypertext and Hypermedia\cite{Nielsen}",
Author="Jakob Nielsen",
Publisher="Academic Press",
Note="Appendix {B}: Annotated Bibliography",
Pages="199" # " -- " # 252,
Year=1990
}
@InBook{Ni:Bib95,
Title="Appendix: Annotated Bibliography",
BookTitle="Multimedia and Hypertext: The Internet and Beyond",
Author="Jakob Nielsen",
Publisher="AP Professional",
Pages=363 # " -- " # 449,
Year=1995
}
@Misc{Le:UTexasBib,
URL="ftp://world.std.com:obi/Hypertext/Texas.A.M/htbib.ascii.Z",
Month="28~"# feb, Year=1993,
Author="John J. Legget and Charles J. Kacmar and John L. Schnase",
Title="Working Bibliography of Hypertext"
}
@Misc{Pe:HCIBib,
Title="The {HCI} Bibliography Project",
Month=13 # "~" # sep, Year=1992,
Author="Gary Perlman",
URL="http://www.hcibib.org/",
Annote="Abstract: `The HCI Bibliography is a free-access online extended
bibliography on Human-Computer Interaction. The basic goal of the
project is to put an online bibliography for most of HCI on the
screens of all researchers, developers, educators and students in the
field through anonymous ftp access, mail servers, and Mac and DOS
floppy disks. Through the efforts of volunteers, the bibliography has
passed 5300 entries, consuming over 4.8 megabytes, with abstracts
and/or tables of contents; eventually, citation information and
hypertext access will be added.'",
Note="An ongoing update of: Perlman, G. (1991) `The HCI
Bibliography Project' {ACM} {SIGCHI} Bulletin, 23:3, 15--20. Author's
e-mail address is $\langle$\path{perlman@cis.ohio-state.edu}$\rangle$"
}
@Article{vanD:HTRevI,
Author="H. {Van Dyke} Parunak",
Title="Comparative Review 9310-0766",
Journal="Computing Reviews",
Month=oct, Year=1993,
Pages="534 -- 538",
Note="Part 1 of a two-part comparative review of books about
Hypertext",
SeeAlso="Part 2~\cite{vanD:HTRevII}",
Keyword="\K{Review}"
}
@Article{vanD:HTRevII,
Author="H. {Van Dyke} Parunak",
Title="Comparative Review 9403-0149",
Journal="Computing Reviews",
Month=mar, Year=1994,
Pages="149 -- 155",
Note="Part 2 of a two-part comparative review of books about
Hypertext",
SeeAlso="Part 1~\cite{vanD:HTRevI}",
Keyword="\K{Review}"
}
@UnPublished{Be:HTComp,
Author="Eastgate Systems",
Title="Hypertext Resources Compendia",
URL="http://www.eastgate.com/hypertext/Compendia.html",
Note="A list of links and descriptions of WWW sites related to
hypertext"
}
@Misc{BUBL,
Author="{BUBL} Information Service",
Title="{BUBL} Journals",
HowPublished="\url{http://bubl.ac.uk/journals/}",
Note="Contents, abstracts or full texts of many current journals and
newsletters"
}
@Book{CompDict
,Title="Dictionary of Computing"
,Editor="Valerie Illingworth"
,Series="{Oxford Reference}" ,Edition="Third"
,Publisher="{Oxford University Press}" ,Year=1991
,ISBN="0-19-286131-X"
,Keyword="\K{Definition}"
,SeeAlso="Additions the OED~\cite{OEDAdd2}, Toyanne's MSc
thesis~\cite{La:Toyanne}"
}
@Book{ShorterOED
,Title="The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary"
,Editor="Lesley Brown"
,Publisher="Clarendon Press" ,Year=1993
}
@Book{OEDAdd2
,Title="Oxford English Dictionary Additions Series"
,Editor="John Simpson and Edmund Weiner"
,Volume=2 ,Year=1993 ,Publisher="Clarendon Press"
,Keyword="\K{Definition}"
,SeeAlso="Oxford Computing Dictionary \cite{CompDict} and Toyanne
Lauritson's thesis \cite{La:Toyanne}"
,Annote="Definition of {\em hypertext} on pages 152 -- 3: `Text
which does not form a single sequence and which may be read in
various orders; specially text and graphics \ldots which are
interconnected in such a way that a reader of the material (as
displayed at a computer terminal, etc.) can discontinue reading
one document at certain points in order to consult other related
matter.'"
}
@Book{CanOxDict
,Title="The Canadian Oxford Dictionary"
,Editor="Katherine Barber"
,Publisher="Oxford University Press"
,Year=1998
,Address="Toronto"
,ISBN="0-19-541120-X"
}
@Book{St:CDP
,Author="David A. Statt"
,Title="The Concise Dictionary of Psychology"
,Publisher="Routledge" ,Address="New York, London" ,Year=1990
,CallNo="BF31.S62 1990"
}
@Book{Go:LDPP
,Editor="Robert M. Goldenson"
,Title="Longman Dictionary of Psychology and Psychiatry"
,Publisher="Longman, Inc." ,Address="New York" ,Year=1984
,CallNo="BF31.L66 1983"
,Series="A {W}alter {D}. {G}lanze book"
}
@Book{Su:IDP,
Author="Norman Stuart Sutherland",
Title="The International Dictionary of Psychology",
Edition="2nd", Year=1996, ISBN="0-8245-2509-4",
Publisher="The Crossroad Publishing Company",
Note="Copyright 1995 The Macmillan Press Ltd."
}
@Book{Zu:EP,
Author="Leonard Zusne",
Title="Eponyms in Psychology: A Dictionary and Biographical
Sourcebook",
Publisher="Greenwood Press", Year=1987,
ISBN="0-313-25750-7"
}
@Book{HCMathDict,
Title="The Harper Collins Dictionary of Mathematics",
Editor="E. J. Borowski and J. M. Borwein",
Publisher="HarperCollins", Year=1991,
ISBN="0-06-461019-5"
}
@Book{Bi:JewishCon,
Author="Philip Birnbaum",
Title="Encyclopedia of Jewish Concepts",
Publisher="Hebrew Publishing Company",
Address="Rockaway Beach, New York", Year=1993,
ISBN="0-88482-930-8"
}
@Book{357Text,
Author="Andrew S. Tanenbaum",
Title="Computer Networks",
Publisher="Prentice Hall",
Edition="2nd", Year=1989,
ISBN="0-13-162959-X", CallNo="TK5105.5.T36 1988"
}
@Book{StatsBook,
Author="William Mendenhall and Terry Sincich",
Title="Statistics for the Engineering and Computer Sciences",
Edition="2nd", Year=1988,
Publisher="Dellen Publishing Company"
}
@Book{Me:CogPsych,
Author="Douglas L. Medin and Brian H. Ross",
Title="Cognitive Psychology",
Publisher="Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College Publishers",
Year=1992
}
@Book{Er:ProAna,
Author="K.~Anders Ericsson and Herbert~A. Simon",
Title="Protocol Analysis: Verbal Reports as Data",
Edition="Revised", Year=1993,
Publisher=MITp,
ISBN="0-262-05047-1/0-262-55023-7 (pbk.)"
}
@Book{Ne:LitMach,
Author="Theodor Holm Nelson",
Title="Literary Machines",
Edition="90.1", Year=1990,
Publisher="The Distributors",
Address="702 South Michigan, South Bend {IN} 46618 {USA}",
ISBN="0-89347-055-4",
From="ILL: Simon Fraser U. Z52.5 X27 N4 1987",
Keyword="\K{Classic} $\bullet$ \K{System!Xanadu}",
Annote="The original definition of hypertext and a proposal
for a world wide franchise called Xanadu."
}
@Book{Horn,
Title="Mapping Hypertext Analysis Linkage, and Display of
Knowledge for the Next Generation of On-Line Text and Graphics",
Author="Robert E. Horn",
Publisher="Lexington Institute", Year=1989,
CallNo="QA76.76.H94.H67 1990",
ISBN="0962556505",
Keyword="\K{General!(Background)}",
Annote="Horn describes: (1)~hypertext as a graph of nodes connected
by links, and (2)~a proprietary technology called Information
Mapping. The book is presented with many cross-references and
icons to approximate a hypertext document. The appendix contains
information about germinal figures and ideas in the development
of hypertext and some related areas. A good overview and
introduction to one type of hypertext."
}
@Book{Salton68,
Title="Automatic Information Organization and Retrieval",
Author="Gerard Salton",
Publisher="{McGraw-Hill Book Company}", Year=1968,
Series="McGraw-Hill computer science",
CallNo="Z.699.S3", ISBN="None", LCC="68-25664",
}
@Book{Salton89,
Author="G.~Salton",
Title="Automatic Text Processing: The Transformation,
Analysis, and Retrieval of Information by Computer",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley", Year=1989,
Annote="Good introduction to information retrieval",
ISBN="0-201-12227-8",
Keyword="\K{Classic}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Salton/McGill}"
}
@Book{Salton/McGill,
Title="Introduction to Modern Information Retrieval",
Author="Gerard Salton and Michael J. McGill",
Publisher="McGraw-Hill Book Company", Year=1983,
ISBN="0-07-054484-0",
CallNo="SLIS/Elborne College 51350 983 01 (Z699.S313)"
}
@Book{Jean'sBook,
Title="Measuring Information: An Information Services Perspective",
Author="Jean Tague-Sutcliffe",
Publisher="Academic Press",
Series="Library and Information Science Series",
Year=1995,
ISBN="0-12682660-9", LCC="Z669.8.T345"
}
@Book{Di:DUE-T,
Author="Andrew Dillon",
Title="Designing Usable Electronic Text: Ergonomic Aspects of Human
Information Usage",
Publisher="Taylor \& Francis", Year=1994,
ISBN="0-7484-0112-1 (cloth) / 0-7484-0113-X (paper)"
}
@Book{Di:DUET2e,
Author="Andrew Dillon",
Title="Designing Usable Electronic Text",
Edition="second", Year=2004,
Publisher="{CRC} Press"
}
@Book{Nielsen,
Title="Hypertext and Hypermedia",
Author="Jakob Nielsen",
Publisher="Academic Press", Year=1990,
CallNo="QA76.76 H94N54 1990", ISBN="0-12-518410-7",
Keyword="\K{General}"
}
@Book{Nielsen95,
Title="Multimedia and Hypertext: The Internet and Beyond",
Author="Jakob Nielsen",
Publisher="Academic Press", Year=1995,
Keyword="\K{General}"
}
@Book{Woodhead,
Title="Hypertext and Hypermedia Theory and Applications",
Author="Nigel Woodhead",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley Publishing Company", Year=1990,
From="Elborne College/SLIS 51380 991 00", ISBN="0-201-54442-3"
}
@Book{RetrievalSystems,
Title="Text Information Retrieval Systems",
Author="Charles T. Meadow",
Publisher="Academic Press", Year=1992,
CallNo="Z699.M413 1992", ISBN="0-12-487410-X",
}
@Book{SortSearch,
Author="Donald E. Knuth",
Series="The Art of Computer Programming",
Volume="{III}",
Title="Sorting and Searching",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley Publishing Company",
Edition="First", Year=1973,
CallNo="QA76.5.K57 v.3", LCC="67-26020",
}
@Book{FundAlgor,
Author="Donald E. Knuth",
Series="The Art of Computer Programming",
Volume="{I}",
Title="Fundamental Algorithms",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley Publishing Company",
Edition="2nd", Year=1973,
CallNo="QA76.5.K57 v.1", LCC="73-1830",
}
@Book{SGMLBook,
Author="Charles F. Goldfarb",
Title="The {SGML} Handbook",
Publisher="Clarendon Press", Year=1990,
ISBN="0-19-853737-9", LCC="Z286.E43G64",
From="Secretary of State Library (Comm. Canada)"
}
@Book{HyTime,
Author="International Organization for Standardization",
Title="Information technology Hypermedia/Time-based Structuring
Language ({HyTime})",
Edition="second 1997-08-01", Year=1997,
Publisher="International Organization for Standardization",
Note="International standard {ISO/IEC} {JTC1/SC18/WG8 N1920}",
Keyword="\K{HyTime}"
}
@Book{MDS,
Author="Joseph B. Krushkal and Myron Wish",
Title="Multidimensional Scaling",
Series="Sage University Press Paper on Quantitative
Applications in the Social Sciences",
Publisher="Sage Publications",
Year=1981,
Address = "275 South Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, California
90212, USA",
Note="Series / Number 07-011",
ISBN="0-8039-0940-3", LCC="77-93286",
Keyword="\K{LSI}"
}
@Book{MSSA,
Author="I.~Borg and J.~Lingoes",
Title="Multidimensional Similarity Structure Analysis",
Publisher="Springer-Verlag",
Year=1987,
CallNo="QA278.2.B685", LCC="87-12795",
ISBN="0-387-96525-4 / 3-540-96525-4"
}
@Book{Krol,
Author="Ed Krol",
Title="The Whole Internet User's Guide \& Catalog",
Publisher="O'Reilly \& Associates, Inc.",
Year=1992,
ISBN="1-56592-025-2"
}
@Book{BigWhite,
Author="Thomas H. Cormen and Charles E. Leiserson and Ronald L.
Rivest",
Title="Introduction to Algorithms",
Publisher="McGraw-Hill",
Year=1991
}
@Book{VicAndVic,
Author="Brian Vickery and Alina Vickery",
Title="Information Science in theory and Practice",
Publisher="Butterworths \& Co.", Year=1987,
ISBN="0-408-10684-0", LCC="86-29913"
}
@Book{UNGuidelines,
Author="F. W.~Lancaster",
Title="Guidelines for the Evaluation of Information Systems
and Services",
Publisher="United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization",
Month=mar, Year=1978
}
@Book{MEDLARS,
Author="F.~W. Lancaster",
Title="Evaluation of the {MEDLARS} Demand Search Service",
Month=jan, Year=1968,
Publisher="{U.S.} Department of Health, Education, And Welfare",
Keyword="\K{MEDLARS}"
}
@Book{Ra:Expertext,
Title="Hypertext: From Text to Expertext",
Author="Roy Rada",
Publisher="McGraw Hill", Year=1991,
CallNo="QA76.76.H94 R33"
}
@Book{Berenson,
Author="Mark L. Berenson and David M. Levine and Matthew
Goldstein",
Title="Intermediate Statistical Methods and Applications: A
Computer Package Approach",
Year=1983,
Publisher="Prentice-Hall"
}
@Book{Gr:HTnConvers,
Author="Susan H. Gray",
Title="Hypertext and the Technology of Conversation: Orderly
Situational Choice",
Publisher="Greenwood Press", Year=1993,
Address="88 Post Rd. West, Westport, {CT} 06881, {USA}",
ISBN="0-313-28962-X", CallNo="QA76.9.H85G72 1993"
}
@Book{Hi:Anaphora,
Author="Graeme Hirst",
Title="Anaphora in Natural Language Understanding: A Survey",
Year=1981,
Publisher="Springer-Verlag",
Series="Lecture notes in computer science", Number=119
}
@Book{Cochran:LSqs,
Author="William G. Cochran and Gertrude M. Cox",
Title="Experimental Designs",
Edition="second", Year=1957, Note="Third printing, 1962",
Publisher="Wiley",
CallNo="Q180.A1C6"
}
@Book{ExDesn,
Author="J. A.~John and M. H.~Quenouille",
Title="Experiments: Design and Analysis",
Edition="second", Year=1977,
Publisher="John Griffin \& Co. Ltd.",
CallNo="Q180.A1.J65 1977"
}
@Book{5thLang,
Author="Robert K. Logan",
Title="The Fifth Language: Learning and Living in the Computer
Age",
Publisher="Stoddart", Year=1995,
ISBN="0-7737-2907-0"
}
@Book{Co:GramPass,
Author="Richard M. Coe",
Title="Toward a Grammar of Passages",
Publisher="Southern Illinois University Press", Year=1988,
Organization="Conference on College Composition and
Communication",
ISBN="0-8093-1420-7", CallNo="PE 1404.C57 1988"
}
@Book{Sc:DUI2e,
Title="Designing the User Interface: Strategies for Effective
Human-Computer Interaction",
Edition="2nd",
Author="Ben Shneiderman",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley", Year=1992
}
@Book{Sh:DUI98,
Title="Designing the User Interface: Strategies for Effective
Human-Computer Interaction",
Edition="Third",
Author="Ben Shneiderman",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley", Year=1998,
ISBN="0-201-69497-2"
}
@Book{Ro:Test,
Author="Gale H. Roid and Thomas M. Haladyna",
Title="A Technology For Test-item Writing",
Publisher="Academic Press", Year=1982,
Series="Educational technology series",
ISBN=0125932502,
CallNo="LB3060.32.C74R64"
}
@Book{Ki:PrHTHy,
Author="Eliot W. Kimber",
Title="Practical Hypermedia: An Introduction To HyTime",
Publisher="Prentice-Hall", Address="New York",
Series="Professional Technical Reference",
Year=1997,
Keyword="\K{HyTime}"
}
@Book{DeR:HM:Hy,
Author="Steven J. DeRose and David G. Durand",
Title="Making hypermedia work: a user's guide to HyTime",
Publisher="Kluwer Academic", Address="Boston", Year=1994,
Keyword="\K{HyTime}"
}
@Book{Li:CSS,
Author="H{\aa}kon Wium Lie and Bert Bos",
Title="Cascading Style Sheets: Designing for the Web",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley", Year=1997,
ISBN="0-201-41998-X"
}
@Book{H+H,
Author="Deborah Hix and H.~Rex Hartson",
Title="Developing User Interface Ensuring Usability Through
Product \& Process",
Publisher="John Wiley \& Sons, Inc.", Year=1993,
Series="Wiley Professional Computing",
ISBN="0-471-57813-4"
}
@Book{Sa:HTRB,
Author="Eileen E. Sargent and Helen Huus and Oliver Andresen",
Title="How to Read a Book",
Publisher="International Reading Association",
Address="Newark, Delaware, {USA}",
Series="Reading Aids",
SeriesEditor="Charles T. Mangrum",
Note="An {IRA} Service Bulletin, Second printing (March~1971)",
Year=1970
,Keyword="\K{Reading} $\bullet$ \K{CS6606}"
}
@Book{Ad:HTRaB
,Author="Mortimer J. Adler and Charles {van Doren}"
,Title="How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent
Reading"
,Publisher="Simon \& Schuster, Inc." ,Year=1972
,Address="Toronto"
,ISBN="0-671-212209-5"
,Keyword="\K{Reading} $\bullet$ \K{CS6606}"
}
@Book{Ru:UsabTest,
Author="Jeffrey Rubin",
Title="Handbook of Usability Testing: How to Plan, Design, and Conduct
Effective Tests",
Publisher="John Wiley \& Sons, Inc.",
Year=1994,
ISBN="0-471-59403-2", CallNo="QA78.9.U83R82 1994",
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Testing}"
}
@Book{No:POET,
Author="Donald A. Norman",
Title="The Psychology of Everyday Things",
Publisher="Basic Books",
Year=1988,
ISBN="0-465-06709-3",
Keyword="\K{Classic} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!models}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Clarifications about affordance~\cite{No:ACD}
\cite[pp.~123 -- 126, 132, 174]{No:IC}
\item Confusion about terms `conceptual model' and `mental
model'~\cite[pp.~74 -- 5, 78, 96]{Bo:CMHCI}
\end{itemize}"
}
@Book{Pr:HCI,
Author="Jenny Preece and Yvonne Rogers and Helen Sharp and David Benyon
and Simon Holland and Tom Carey",
Title="Human-Computer Interaction",
Year=1994,
Publisher="Prentice-Hall Europe",
ISBN="0-201-62769-8",
SeeAlso="Preece, et al.'s \textit{Interaction Design: Beyond
HCI}~\cite{Pr:ID}"
@Book{Pr:ID,
Author="Jennifer Preece and Yvonne Rogers and Helen Sharp",
Title="Interaction Design: Beyond Human-Computer Interaction",
Year=2002,
Publisher="John Wiley \& Sons, Inc.",
ISBN="0-471-49278-7", LCC="QA76.9.H85 P72 2002",
SeeAlso="Preece, et al.'s \textit{Human Computer
Interaction}~\cite{Pr:HCI}"
}
@Unpublished{Le:TCUID,
Author="Clayton Lewis and John Rieman",
Title="Task-Centered User Interface Design: A Practical Introduction",
Year="1993, 1994",
Keyword="\K{HCI}",
Note="Available at \url{ftp://ftp.cs.colorado.edu}"
}
@Book{No:IC,
Author="Donald A. Norman",
Title="The Invisible Computer: Why good products can fail, the personal
computer is so complex, and information appliances are the solution",
Publisher=MITp, Year=1998, CallNo="QA76.5.N665 1998",
ISBN="0-262-14065-9 (hc: alk. paper), 0-262-64041-1 (pb)",
Annote="See especially Figure 12.1 (p.~251)",
SeeAlso="P.O.E.T.~\cite{No:POET}",
Note="{\bfseries Lent to Nur Zincir-Heywood (12 Feb 2001)}"
}
@Book{Ga:CPIOL,
Title="Cognitive Psychology In and Out of the Laboratory",
Author="Kathleen M. Galotti",
Publisher="Brooks/Cole Publishing Company", Year=1994,
ISBN="0-534-21054-6", CallNo="BF 201 G35 1994",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych}"
}
@Book{He:MA,
Author="L. V. Hedges and I. Olkin",
Title="Statistical Methods for Meta-analysis",
Publisher="Academic Press", Address="New York",
Year=1985,
Note="Citation from Galotti~\cite[p.~494]{Ga:CPIOL}",
Annote="recommended by Galotti (p.423, 438)"
}
@Book{Ha:SDCA,
Author="Diane F. Halpern",
Title="Sex Differences in Cognitive Abilities",
Edition="2nd",
Publisher="Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.",
Year=1992,
ISBN="0-8058-0845-0", CallNo="BF 311 H295 1992",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Galotti's book~\cite{Ga:CPIOL}
\item Halpern and Collaer's chapter~\cite{Ha:SDVA}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@Book{Ki:GTA,
Editor="B. Kirwan and L.K. Ainsworth",
Title="A Guide To Task Analysis",
Publisher="Taylor \& Francis Inc.", Address="Washington, {DC}",
ISBN="0-7484-0057-5(cloth)/0-7484-0058-3(paper)",
Year=1992,
Keyword="\K{task\_analysis}"
}
@Book{Sh:HTA,
Author="Andrew Shepherd",
Title="Hierarchical Task Analysis",
Publisher="Taylor \& Francis", Address="New York, {NY}",
Year="2001",
LCC="TA 166 S45 2001", ISBN="0-7484-0387-1(hc) / 0-7484-0838-X(p)",
Keyword="\K{task\_analysis}"
}
@Book{Ea:ITOC,
Author="Ken Eason",
Title="Information Technology and Organisational Change",
LCC="HD 30.2 E17 1988", From="Mt. St. Vincent U.",
Publisher="Taylor \& Francis", Address="Philadelphia", Year=1988,
ISBN="0-85066-388-1", Note="Reprinted 1990"
}
@Book{Di:HCI,
Author="Alan Dix and Janet Finlay and Gregory Abowd and Russell Beale",
Title="Human-Computer Interaction", Edition="2nd",
Publisher="Prentice Hall Europe", Year=1998, ISBN="0-13-239864-8"
}
@Book{Di:HCI3e,
Author="Alan Dix and Janet Finlay and Gregory Abowd and Russell
Beale",
Title="Human-Computer Interaction", Edition="third", Year=2004,
Publisher="Prentice Hall", ISBN="0-13-046109-1"
}
@Book{Fl:pc,
Author="Luciano Floridi",
Title="Philosophy and Computing: An Introduction",
Publisher="Routledge", Year=1999,
ISBN="0-415-18024-4 (hbk) / 0-415-18025-2 (pbk)"
}
@Book{Ma:CIDNM,
Author="David J. Marchette",
Title="Computer Intrusion Detection and Network Monitoring: A
Statistical Viewpoint",
Series="Statistics for Engineering and Information Science",
Publisher="Springer-Verlag", Address="New York",
Year=2001,
ISBN="0-387-95281-0", LCC="QA76.9.A25.M34 2001",
}
@Book{Sa:StatsHandbook,
Title="Applied statistics: a handbook of techniques",
Author="Lothar Sachs",
Edition="second",
Publisher="Springer-Verlag",
Year=1984,
Location="New York",
Series="Springer series in statistics",
Note="Translation of: Angewandte Statistik. Translated by: Zenon
Reynarowych",
ISBN="0-387-90976-1 (New York), 3-540-90976-1 (Berlin)",
LCC="QA276.S213 1984"
}
@Book{Jo:DSCOT
,Author="Bryon Jones and Michael G. Kenward"
,Title="Design and Analysis of Cross-Over Trials"
,Series="Mongraphs on Statistics and Applied Probability"
,Number=34
,Publisher="Chapman and Hall" ,Location="London"
,Year=1989
,ISBN="0-412-30000-1"
,LCC="R853.C76.J66 1989"
}
@Book{CERT:Guide
,Title="The {CERT}$^{\mbox{\textregistered}}$ Guide To System and
Network Security Practices"
,Author="Julia Allen"
,Publisher="Addison-Wesley"
,Year=2001
,ISBN="020173723X"
,Keyword="\K{Security}"
}
@Book{Sp:Vis
,Title="Information Visualization"
,Author="Robert Spence"
,Publisher="{ACM} Press"
,Year=2001
,ISBN="0-201-59626-1"
}
@Book{Ja:Marg
,Author="H. J. Jackson"
,Title="Marginalia: Reader's Writing in Books"
,Publisher="Yale University Press"
,Year=2001
,LCC="Z1003.J12 2001"
,ISBN="0-300-08816-7"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@Book{Ha:Doc
,Author="Robert Hauptman"
,Title="Documentation: A history and critique of attribution,
commentary, glosses, marginalia, notes, bibliographies,
works-cited lists, and citation indexing and analysis"
,Publisher="McFarland \& Company, Inc."
,Address="Jefferson, {NC}"
,Year=2008
,ISBN="978-0-7864-3333-9"
,LCC="PN171.F56H38 2008"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@Book{Sa:TDC
,Author="John Ralston Saul"
,Title="The Doubter's Companion: A Dictionary of Aggressive Common
Sense"
,Publisher="Penguin Books"
,Year=1995
,LCC="PE1680.S38 1995"
,ISBN="0-14-023707-0"
,Keyword="\K{annotation!glossary}"
}
@Book{Mo:WSCF
,Author="Harvey Molotch"
,Title="Where Stuff Comes From: How Toasters, Toilets, Cars, Computers,
and Many Other Things Come to Be As They Are"
,Publisher="Routledge"
,Note="\copyright{} by Taylor \& Francis Books, Inc."
,Year=2003
,LCC="TA148.M65 2003"
,ISBN="0-415-94400-7"
,Keyword="\K{colour} (pp.\,101, 102, 114 -- 115?, 121, 128, 135?)
$\bullet$ \K{HCI!cultural factors} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606}
$\bullet$ Design"
}
@Book{Su:CCH
,Title="The Complete Color Harmony: Expert Color Information for
Professional Color Results"
,Author="Tina Sutton and Bride M. Whelan"
,Publisher="Rockport Publishers"
,Year=2004
,ISBN="1-592-53031-1"
,Keyword="\K{colour}"
}
@Book{Ko:CAPH
,Title="Colorist: A Practical Handbook for Personal and Professional
Use"
,Author="Shigenobu Kobayashi"
,Year=1998
,Publisher="Kodansha International"
,ISBN="4-7700-2323-5"
,Note="First published in Japanese by Kodansha International Limited as
\textit{Karaarisuto (Colorist)}. Translated by Keiichi Ogata and Leza
Lowitz. Copyright by the author."
,Keyword="\K{colour}"
}
@Book{Kr:CI
,Title="Color Index: Over 1100 Color Combinations {CMYK} and {RGB}
Formulas For Print and Web Media"
,Author="Jim Krause"
,Publisher="{HOW} Design Books (an imprint of {F\&W} Publications, Inc."
,Address="4700 East Galbraith Road, Cincinnati, Ohio, 45236"
,Year=2002
,ISBN="1-58180-236-6"
,Note="Copyright by the author"
,LCC="NC997 .K73 2002"
,Keyword="\K{colour}"
}
@Book{Th:SDM
,Title="Screen Design Manual: Communicating Effectively Through
Multimedia"
,Author="Frank Thissen"
,Publisher="Springer"
,Year=2004
,ISBN="3-540-43923-4"
,Note="`Translated from the third edition of the German
{\guillemotleft}Kompendium Screen-Design{\guillemotright}
(Springer-Verlag 2003, ISBN~3-540-43552-2) by James G. Rage,
Johnson City, Tennessee, USA' (quoted from p.\,4)"
,Keyword="\K{colour}"
}
@Book{Wi:NDDB
,Title="The Non-Designer's Design Book: Design and Typographic
Principles for the Visual Novice"
,Author="Robin Williams"
,Publisher="Peachpit Press"
,Address="1249 Eight Street, Berkeley, {CA}, 94710"
,Year=1994
,Note="Copyright by the author"
,ISBN="1-56609-159-4"
,Keyword="\K{colour} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606} $\bullet$
\K{System!WWW!CS4173} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS4163} $\bullet$
\K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Book{Wi:NDDB3
,Title="The Non-Designer's Design Book: Design and Typographic
Principles for the Visual Novice"
,Author="Robin Williams"
,Publisher="Peachpit Press"
,Address="1249 Eight Street, Berkeley, {CA}, 94710"
,Year=2008 ,Edition="Third"
,Note="Copyright by the author"
,ISBN="978-0-321-5304-0"
,Keyword="\K{colour} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606} $\bullet$
\K{System!WWW!CS4173} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS4163} $\bullet$
\K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Book{Wi:NDW3B
,Title="The Non-Designer's Web Book: An easy guide to creating,
designing and posting your own web site"
,Author="Robin Williams and John Tollett"
,Publisher="Peachpit Press"
,Address="1249 Eight Street, Berkeley, {CA}, 94710"
,Year=2006 ,Edition="Third"
,Note="Copyright by the authors"
,ISBN="978-0-321-30337-0"
,Keyword="\K{colour} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606} $\bullet$
\K{System!WWW!CS4173} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS4163} $\bullet$
\K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Book{Hu:LoW
,Title="The Laws of the Web: Patterns in the Ecology of Information"
,Author="Bernardo A. Huberman"
,Publisher=MITp
,Year=2001
,ISBN="0-262-58225-2"
,LCC="ZA4226.H83 2001"
,SeeAlso="Mobile Web Surfing is the Same as Web Surfing \cite{Ha:MWSWS}"
,Keyword="\K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Book{Al:IoC
,Title="Interaction of Color: Unabridged exts and Selected Plates"
,Author="Josef Albers"
,Edition="Revised"
,Publisher="Yale University Press"
,Year=1975
,Keyword="\K{colour}"
}
@Book{Bi:PoC
,Title="Principles of Color: A Review of Past Traditions and Modern
Theories"
,Author="Faber Birren"
,Publisher="Schiffer Publishing, Limited"
,Address="77 Lower Valley Road, Atglen, {PA} 19310"
,Year=1987
,Note="From page 2: `New material \copyright{}\,1987 by Faber Birren.
Copyright \copyright{}\,1969 by Van Nostrand Reinhold Company Inc.'"
,ISBN="0-88740-103-1"
,Keyword="\K{colour}"
}
@Book{It:EoC
,Title="The Elements of Color: A Treatise on the Color System of Johannes
Itten Based on his book \textit{The Art of Color} Edited and with a
forward and Evaluation by Faber Birren. Translated by Ernst van
Hagen."
,Author="Johannes Itten"
,Publisher="John Wiley \& Sons, Inc."
,Year=2001
,Note="From page 2: `Originally published in German under the title
{KUNST DER FABRE}, Studeienausgabe by Johannes Itten Copyright
\copyright{} 2001 Seemann Verlag, Leipzeig'"
,Keyword="\K{colour}"
}
@Book{Tr:ECD
,Title="Effective Color Displays"
,Author="David Travis"
,Series="Computer and People"
,Publisher="Academic Press"
,Year=1991
,ISBN="0-12-697690-2"
,Keyword="\K{colour} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS6606}"
}
@Book{Al:WS
,Title="Web Services: Concepts, Architectures and Applictions"
,Author="Gustavo Alonso and Fabio Casati and Harumi Kuno and Vijay
Machiraju"
,Publisher="Springer-Verlag" ,Year=2004
,ISBN="3-540-44008-9"
,Keyword="\K{System!WWW} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW!CS4173} $\bullet$
\K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@Book{Lu:VI
,Title="Visual Illusions: Their Causes, Characteristics \& Applications
with a New Introduction by William H. Ittelson"
,Author="M. Luckiesh"
,Publisher="Dover Publications, Inc." ,Year=1965
,ISBN="0-486-21530-X"
}
@Book{Ro:PVI
,Title="The Psychology of Visual Illusion"
,Author="J. O. Robinson"
,Publisher="Dover Publications, Inc." ,Year=1998
,ISBN="0-486-40449-8" ,LCC="QP495.R58 1998"
,Note="Copyright by the author 1972, 1988"
}
@Book{Mi:CGWN
,Title="The Chicago Guide to Writing about Numbers: The effective
presentation of quantitative information"
,Author="Janes E. Miller"
,Publisher="The University of Chicago Press"
,Year=2004
,ISBN="0-226-52631-3 (paper)"
,SeeAlso="Writing about Multivariate Analysis~\cite{Mi:CGWMA}"
,Keyword="\K{Basic skills for grad students}"
}
@Book{Mi:CGWMA
,Title="The Chicago Guide to Writing about Multivariate Analysis"
,Author="Janes E. Miller"
,Publisher="The University of Chicago Press"
,Year=2005
,ISBN="0-226-52783-2 (paper)"
,SeeAlso="Writing about Numbers~\cite{Mi:CGWN}"
,Keyword="\K{Basic skills for grad students}"
}
@Book{vanL:AHfS
,Author="Mary-Claire {van Leunen}"
,Title="A Handbook for Scholars"
,Edition="Revised"
,Publisher="Oxford University Press"
,Year=1992
,ISBN="0-19-506953-5 (cloth) / 0-19-506954-4 (paper)"
,Keyword="\K{Basic skills for grad students}"
}
@Book{Ba:MIW
,Author="Pierre Baldi and Paolo Fransconi and Padhraic Smyth"
,Title="Modeling the Internet and the Web: Probabilistic Methods and
Algorithms"
,Publisher="John Wiley \& Sons, Ltd."
,ISBN="0-470-84906-1"
,Year=2003
,Note="Copyright by the authors"
}
@Book{Po:DUI
,Author="James E. Powell"
,Title="Designing User Interfaces"
,Publisher="Microtrend\texttrademark{} Books, Slawson Communications, Inc."
,Address="{San Marcos}, {CA}, 92069-1436, {USA}"
,Year=1990
,Series="The DATA BASED ADVISOR\textregistered{} Series"
,ISBN="0-915391-40-6"
,Note="Copyright by the author"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS4163} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS4163!Brain Surgeon exercises}
$\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS3160 (UID)!Brain Surgeon exercises}"
}
@Book{Ko:FHN,
Author = "Bryan Kolb and Ian Q. Wishaw",
Title = "Fundamentals of Human Neuropsychology",
Publisher = {W. H. Freeman},
Address = "New York",
Year = 1996,
Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Book{psykologiforlaget71,
Author = {Psykologiforlaget},
Title = {Manual till DS-batteriet (Manual for the DS-tests)},
Publisher = {Psykologiforlaget AB},
Address = {Stockholm, Sweden},
Year = 1971,
Note=" [In Swedish]. Cited by D{\"{a}}hlback et
al.~\cite{dahlback96} and D{\"{a}}hlback \&
L{\"{o}}nnqvist~\cite{dahlback00}",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Book{Ey:CPSH4,
Author="Michael W. Eysenck and Mark T. Keane",
Title="Cognitive Psychology: A Students's Handbook",
Publisher="Taylor \& Francis",
Edition="Fourth", Year=2000, ISBN="0-86377-551-9",
}
@Book{An:CPII,
Author="John R. Anderson",
Title="Cognitive Psychology and Its Implications",
Publisher="Worth Publishers", Address="New York",
Edition="Fifth", Year=2000, ISBN="0-7167-3678-0",
Annote="Spatial ability: pp.\,451--456",
Keywords="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Article{Ek:MBRM
,Title="Cognitive Factors: Their Identification and Replication"
,Author="Ruth B. Ekstrom and John W. French and Harry H. Harman"
,Journal="Multivariate Behavioral Research Monographs"
,Publisher="Society of Multivariate Experimental Psychology, Inc."
,Volume="79-2" ,Year=1979
,LCC="BF 311 E46"
}
@Book{Ko:FoHN
,Title="Fundamentals of Human Neuropsychology"
,Author="Bryan Kolb and Ian Q. Whishaw"
,Editon="Fifth" ,Year=2003
,Publisher="Worth Publishers"
,SeriesTitle="A Series of Books in Psychology"
,SeriesEditor="Richard C. Atkinson and Gardner Lindzey and
Richard F. Thompson"
,ISBN="0-7167-5300-6"
,Annote="
\begin{description}
\item [p.\,573] `There is a growing consensus among researchers
that two-dimensional paper-and-pencil tests may not tap the
same spatial abilities that are exercised in the real-life
process of way finding. Just as it is difficult to subject
brain-injured patients to real-life tests of navigating
through novel and familiar environments, it is not possible to
perform brain scans on subjects as they perform real-life
tasks. Consequently, the use of computer-based virtual
spatial tasks has increased in the hope that these tasks can
evaluate the same abilities as those used in a real spatial
world.'
\end{description}"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation}"
}
@Book{Kl:TLKIA
,Editor="Robert Klanten and Kika Mischler and Silja Bilz"
,ISBN="978-3-89955-167-9"
,Title="The Little Know-It-All: Common Sense for Designers"
,Publisher="Die Gesalten Verlag"
,Year=2007 ,Address="Berlin"
}
@Book{Ca:HCA
,Author="J.~B. Carroll"
,Title="Human Cognitive Abilities: A Survey of Factor-Analytic Studies"
,Publisher="Cambridge University Press"
,Address="New York" ,Year=1993
}
@Book{Pa:MRDCA
,Author="Allan Paivio"
,Title="Mental Representations: A Dual Coding Approach"
,Publisher="Oxford University Press" ,Year=1986
,ISBN="0-195-06666-9"
}
@Book{McB:RM
,Author="Donald H. McBurney and Theresa L. White"
,Title="Research Methods"
,Year=2004 ,Edition="6th"
,Publisher="Wadsworth" ,Address="Toronto"
,ISBN="0-534-52418-4"
,Annote="Jack Duffy says (12 Feb 2004, e-mail) that these authors
claim that a $p$ level of $.10$ is acceptable for
\emph{exploratory} research"
}
@Book{Ko:CtP
,Author="Stephen M. Kosslyn"
,Title="Clear and to The Point: 8 Pyschological Principles for
Compelling {PowerPoint$^{\mbox{\textregistered}}$} Presentations"
,Publisher="Oxford University Press" ,Year=2007
,ISBN="978-0-19-532069-5" ,LCC="P93.53.M534K67 2007"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!colour} $\bullet$ \K{Basic skills for grad students}"
}
@Book{Ga:TSIS
,Author="Gerald Graff and Cathy Birkenstein"
,Title="They Say I Say: The Moves That Matter in Academic Writing"
,Publisher="W. W. Norton" ,Year=2006
,ISBN="978-0-393-92409-1"
,Keyword="\K{Basic skills for grad students}"
}
@Book{Ro:CMEG
,Author="Naomi B. Robbins"
,Title="Creating More Effective Graphs"
,Publisher="John Wiley \& Sons, Inc." ,Year=2005
,ISBN="0-471-27402-X" ,LCC="HA31.R535 2005"
,SeeAlso="example in Clear and to the Point \cite[pp.\,28--32,
Figs.\,2.6--2.8]{Ko:CtP}"
,Keyword="\K{Basic skills for grad students}"
}
@Book{Jo:IN
,Author="Erik Jonsson"
,Title="Inner Navigation: Why we get lost and how we find our way"
,Publisher="Scribner" ,Year=2002
,ISBN="0-7432-2206-7"
,Keyword="K{Navigation}"
}
@Book{Sq:GIRwT
,Author="Victoria Squire and Hans Peter Willberg and Friedrich
Forssman"
,Title="Getting it Right with Type: The dos and don'ts of
typography"
,Publisher="Laurence King Publishing Ltd" ,Year=2000
,Address="London (UK)"
,ISBN="978-1-85669-474-2"
,Keyword="K{Design!typography}"
}
@Book{Lu:TwT
,Author="Ellen Lupton"
,Title="Thinking with Type: A Critical Guide for Designers, Writers,
Editors, \& Students"
,Publisher="Princeton Architectural Press" ,Year=2004
,Address="New York, {NY}"
,ISBN="978-1-56898-448-3" ,LCC="Z246.L87 2004"
,Keyword="K{Design!typography}"
}
@Book{Ha:IGACIR
,Author="Rob3ert L. Harris"
,Title="Information Graphics: A Comprehensive Illustrated Reference"
,Publisher="Oxford University Press" ,Year=1999
,ISBN="978-0-19-513532-9" ,LCC="QA90.H287 1999"
,Keyword="\K{Basic skills for grad students}"
}
@Book{Sh:DTUI4e
,Author="Ben Shneiderman and Catherine Plaisant"
,Title="Designing the User Interface: Strategies for Effective
Human-Computer Interaction"
,Edition="Fourth" ,Year=2005
,Publisher="Addison-Wesley" ,ISBN="978-0-321-19786-3"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!Intro!textbook} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS3160 (UID)} $\bullet$
\K{HCI!CS4163} $\bullet$ \K{CS3160 (UID)}"
}
@Book{St:UID+E
,Author="Debbie Stone and Caroline Jarrett and Mark Woodroffe and
Shailey Minocha"
,Title="User Interface Design and Evaluation"
,Publisher="Elsevier, Inc."
,Year=2005
,Series="Morgan Kaufmann Series in Interactive Technologies"
,ISBN="978-0-12-088436-0" ,LCC="QA76.9.U83U835 2005"
,Note="\copyright\,The Open University 2005"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!Intro!textbook} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS3160 (UID)} $\bullet$ \K{CS3160 (UID)}"
}
@Book{He:ResInt
,Author="Steven Heim"
,Title="The Resonant Interface: {HCI} Foundations for Interaction Design"
,Year=2007
,Publisher="Addison-Wesley Longman Publishing Co., Inc."
,ISBN="0-321-37596-3"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!Intro!textbook} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS3160 (UID)} $\bullet$ \K{CS3160 (UID)}"
}
@Book{Sm:Tagging
,Author="Gene Smith"
,Title="Tagging: People-Powered Metadata for the Social Web"
,Publisher="New Riders" ,Address="Berkeley, {CA}"
,Year=2008
,ISBN="978-0-321-52917-6"
,LCC="Z 666.7 S65 2008"
}
@Book{Wa:InfoVpfd
,Author="Colin Ware"
,Title="Information Visualization: Perception for Design"
,Edition="second"
,Publisher="Elsevier Inc." ,ISBN="1-55860-819-2" ,Year=2004
,Keyword="\K{HCI!colour} $\bullet$ \K{HCI!CS3160 (UID)} $\bullet$ \K{CS3160 (UID)}"
}
@Book{Cr:JSGP
,Author="Douglas Crockford"
,Title="{JavaScript}: The Good Parts"
,Publisher="O'Reilly Media, Inc."
,Year=2008
,ISBN="978-0-596-51774-8"
,Note="\copyright\,2008 Yahoo! Inc."
,Keyword="\K{System!WWW!CS4173} $\bullet$ \K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$
JavaScript"
}
@Book{Ko:ppkJS
,Author="Peter-Paul Koch"
,Title="{\th}p{]}\textbraceleft{} on {JavaScript}"
,Publisher="New Riders"
,Year=2007 ,ISBN="0-321-42330-5"
,Keyword="\K{System!WWW!CS4173} $\bullet$ \K{CS4173 (WWW)} $\bullet$
JavaScript"
}
@Book{Ra:BR
,Author="Peter J. Rabinowitz"
,Title="Before Reading: Narrative Conventions and the Politics of
Interpretation"
,Address="Columbus, {OH}"
,Publisher="Ohio State University Press"
,Year=1998
,HowPublished="\url{http://www.ohiostatepress.org/index.htm?/books/complete%20pdfs/rabinowitz%20before/rabinowitz%20before.htm}"
,Keyword="\K{CS6606} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@Book{Ma:RWeB
,Author="Catherine C. Marshall"
,Title="Reading and Writing the Electronic Book"
,Series="Synthesis Lectures on Information Concepts, Retrieval, and
Services"
,Publisher="Morgan \& Claypool Publishers"
,Year=2010
,DOI="10.2200/S00215ED1V01Y200907ICR009"
,Note="The paper version is monochrome. Lecture 9 in the series
edited by Gary Marchionini."
,Annote="
\begin{description}
\item[p.\,16 \S2.1.1]
Active reading
\item[p.\,20 Table 2.1]
Characterisation of reading types
\item[p.\,48 Table 3.3]
Examples of different functions of annotation
\item[p.\,68 \S3.4]
Bookmarks as annotation
\item[p.\,71 (footnote 18) \S3.5.2]
Written vs. types annotation
\item[Chapter 5]
How to experiment and study readers
\begin{itemize}
\item[] p.\,108 \S5.3.4 Mechanical Turk
\end{itemize}
\item[p.\,116 \S5.4.6]
Don't confuse data analysis tools with methods
\item[pp.\,119--120]
Openbook and IDPF
\item[pp.\,136\textit{ff} \S6.3.3]
2005 PhD about eBooks especially textbooks
\item[p.\,139 \S6.4]
Short definition of blog and wiki
\item[pp.\,152--157 \S7.1.2]
\begin{itemize}
\item how people read following annotation (especially pp.\,152--153)
\item see also p.\,59 in \S3.2.3 for notes on orientation
\end{itemize}
\item[\S7.2.3]
gathering and triage
\end{description}"
,Keyword="\K{Evaluation} $\bullet$ \K{Reading} $\bullet$
\K{hardware!digital paper} $\bullet$ \K{hardware!e-paper} $\bullet$
\K{Testing} $\bullet$ \K{interface} $\bullet$ \K{annotation} $\bullet$
\K{} $\bullet$ \K{} $\bullet$ \K{} $\bullet$"
}
@Book{Ei:CHASM
,Title="A Critical Hypertext Analysis of Social Media:
The True Colours of Facebook"
,Author="Volker Eisenlauer"
,Publisher="Bloomsbury Academic" ,Year=2013
,Address="London (UK)"
,LCC="HM743.F33E57 2013"
,ISBN="\begin{description}
\item[(hc)] 978-1-4411-7088-0,
\item[(PDF) 978-1-4411-0514-1,
\item[(ePUB)] 978-1-4411-5970-0
\end{description}"
,Annote="\begin{description}
\item[pp.\,64--65 (q.v. p.\,62)]
\begin{quotation}
[Link-based] Hypertexts are combined in
\emph{multilinear} ways rather than in one single
linear, causal and temporal order. As a result of their
\emph{fragmentary} organization, independent text
clusters can be connected into meaningful wholes. Such
a re-assembling is built on user's \emph{interaction}
with the text that encompasses not only a manipulation
of textual structures, but, moreover, its cognitive
processing as well as the users' active participation in
the production of text content. Hypertexts combine
\emph{multimodal} representational formats, such as
text, pictures, audio or film, into cohesive and
coherent textual artefacts.
\end{quotation}
%
\item[p.\,78]
\begin{quotation}
The formation of a mental model within a hypertextual
environment goes hand in hand with the retrieval and
arrangement of the text surface. Thus hypertext users
must persistently integrate their declarative'knowledge
with their procedural knowledge about proceeding through
hypertext. lntranodal and internodal coherence-building
processes are typically based on a common reference
frame, while extranodal coherence-building encompasses a
variety. of reference frames, thus suppressing the
set-up of shared knowledge systems among authors and
readers.
\end{quotation}
%
\item[p.\,132]
\begin{quotation}
[S]oftware services, such as Fb [Facebook], leave
participants no other choice than to present facets of
their self images in a multilinear and hyper linked
structure. In the same vein, the discussion of Fb in
terms of 'multilinearity' has revealed that Fb's pre-set
structure (and default templates) restrict members'
options for self-presentation. In contrast to a
member's complex and subtle comprehension of self,
\emph{the individual text actions building her/his Fb
profile are bound to standardized templates, default
options and a more or less fixed hierarchical
structure. However, the sheer quantity of pre-set
options and default processes of (semi-)automatic text
generation make it difficult for users to become aware
of the other-directedness of their text actions.}
\end{quotation}
%
\item[p.\32]
\begin{quotation}
From September 2011 onwards Fb [Facebook] modified the
Personal Profile by introducing the so-called
`Timeline'. The [sic] book's analysis is based on an
earlier Fb version effective between January 2010 and
April 2011.
\end{quotation}
%
\item[pp.\,207--209]
\begin{quotation}
From the very beginning the Internet was perceived as a
social space.{}\ldots the social spaces allocated by
Internet and/or Web 2.0 technologies are by no means
'neutral environments', but are occupied with the ideas
and visions of a given society.{}\ldots Comparable to
printed forms (blanks), software templates are designed
to elicit certain information, while suppressing other
choices. However, unlike their printed counterparts,
software services also generate, present and distribute
provided user information in public or semi-public
contexts. \emph{It follows that software services, such
as Fb [Facebook], cannot be considered as mere transport
media, but as technological tools that deprive text
authors of their individual semiotic choices and
intervene in the flow of discourse among users}.{}\ldots
In the case of Fb, the software service enables the
formation and maintenance of social relations among
users, while at the same time standardizing the
underlying communicative actions.{}\ldots Fb also has
great impact on the members' perception and
conceptualization of time and space. \emph{If we define
ideology as a set of beliefs bf which we are barely
conscious, [as something that] instructs us about time,
space, and number fand that] forms our ideas of how we
stand in relation to nature and to each other' (Postman
1992: 123), we can regard software services, such as Fb,
as highly ideological tools.}
%
Through the 'technization of the lifeworld' people
recurrently experience that they are nonautonomous
beings dependent on technological tools and their
creators. Weizenbaum (1976) has shown that 'a tool gains
its power from the fact that it permits certain actions
and not others' (1976:37). In his view, the power of
tools emerges from simultaneously reducing and extending
human action and experience. With the introduction of
new technologies --- or in our case software services
--- people acquire not only novel sets of practices, but
also new perspectives on and new understandings of
social reality.{}\ldots \emph{As shown, the software
environment displaces users by providing them with text
generation and distribution tools that have great impact
on how they choose, arrange and give coherence to their
texts}.{}\ldots
%
In the analysis, the identification of Fb as an
ideological tool can be specified in the following way:
When utilizing complex text automation tools, Fb members
gradually hand over control of their actions to the
software service.
\end{quotation}
%
\item[pp.\,211--212]
\begin{quotation}
In contrast to a member's complex and subtle
comprehension of self, the individual texts building
her/his Fb [Facebook] profile are bound to standardized
templates, default options and a more or less fixed
hierarchical structure. \emph{While in real life
contexts discourse participants determine different
things appropriate for different kinds of audiences,
within Fb contexts users outsource the dispersion of
their texts partially to the text automation properties
of the software}.
\end{quotation}
%
\item[p.\,21]
\begin{quotation}
\emph{Social Software-based} Websites whose primary
aim is \emph{establishing and maintaining online
communities} by asking participants to present
themselves (in the form of public or semi-public
profiles) and to connect and communicate with other
participants.
\end{quotation}
%
\item[p.\212]
\begin{quotation}
\emph{We can therefore establish that Fb [Facebook]
acts as a kind of author: By facilitating and/or
allocating distinct sets of dkcourse patterns Fb
intervenes in the communication between profile owner
(first author) and profile recipient (second author). As
a third author it shapes the structure and/or contents
of the respective discourses and, moreover, controls the
contexts in which the texts are presented}. As a
consequence, Fb members experience a gradual loss of
control over their texts: Due to automatic text
generation, Fb members may set off software-generated
texts against their will; likewise, as an effect of
automatic text distribution, members may lose control
over the context, in which their posts, comments or
other personal data is presented.{}\ldots In both cases,
a member is neither in control of nor responsible for
the communicative outcome of the action; the displayed
and distributed texts bear no relation to her/his
individual communicative aims.
\end{quotation}
\end{description}"
,Keyword="\K{HT!General} $\bullet$ \K{Social media} $\bullet$
\K{Discourse analysis}",
}
%% Programs
@Manual{PARAFAC,
Author="Margaret E. Lundy and Richard A. Harshman",
Title="Reference Manual for the {PARAFAC} Analysis Package",
Year=1985,
Organization="Scientific Software Associates",
Address="48 Wilson Avenue, London, Ontario, N6H 1X3, Canada",
Note="{PARAFAC} is available via anonymous ftp from
\url{ftp://phobos.sscl.uwo.ca}",
Keyword="\K{LSI}"
}
@Misc{f2c,
Key ="f2c",
Title="f2c [computer program]",
Note="available by ftp from \path{research.att.com} (login
\path{netlib}, in directory \path{f2c}).",
Annote="{\sc Fortran} to {\sc C} converter"
}
@Unpublished{LSI.package,
Title="{LSI} package",
Author="Scott Deerwester and Susan Dumais and Michael Berry",
Note="copyright \copyright 1990 Bell Communications Research, Inc.\\
Provided by Susan Dumais
$\langle$\path{dumais@bellcore.com}$\rangle$ Bell Communications
Research, 445 South St., Morristown, NJ 07960, USA.",
Year=1990
}
@Misc{Mosaic,
Key="NCSA",
Title="{NCSA} {Mosaic} for {X}",
HowPublished="available via anonymous FTP from
\path{ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu} in the \path{Mosaic} directory",
Author="Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina",
Note="See
\url{http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/XMosaic/index.html}
for more information"
}
@Misc{SMART-11.0,
Title="SMART version 11.0",
HowPublished="available via anonymous FTP at
\url{ftp://ftp.cs.cornell.edu/pub/smart/smart.11.0.tar.Z}",
Author="Chris Buckley",
Month="12~" # jul, Year=1992
}
@Misc{Blu:STATPAK,
Author="James Blustein and Jean Tague-Sutcliffe",
Title="{IR-STAT-PAK} [computer program]",
URL="http://ftp://ftp-nlpir.nist.gov/pub/irstat/",
Note="Overview at
\url{http://www.csd.uwo.ca/~jamie/IRSP-overview.html} and
\url{http://www.csd.uwo.ca.ca/%7ejamie/PS/IRSP-one.ps}"
}
@Manual{Ekstrom76,
Author = {Ekstrom, R. B. and French, J. W. and Harman, H. H. and Dermen, D.},
Title = "Manual for Kit of Factor-Referenced Cognitive Tests",
Organization = {Educational Testing Service},
Address = "Princeton, {NJ}",
Year = 1976,
Annote = "Cited by Allen~\cite{Br:IFRIS,Al:IDCUCD}, Chen~\cite{Ch:IDVEO},
Cribbin and Chen~\cite{cribbin01}, Curl et al.~\cite{curl98}, Stanney
and Salvendy~\cite{St:IVALSI}",
Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Manual{witkin71,
Author = "Witkin, H. and Oltman, P. and Raskin, E. and Karp, S.",
Title = "A manual for the Embedded Figure Tests",
Publisher = {Consulting Psychologists Press},
Address = "Palo Alto, {CA}",
Year = 1971,
Note="Cited by Castelli et al.~\cite{Ca:CVPHT}",
Keywords="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@Book{AnnRev89,
Title=ARIST,
Volume=24, Year=1989,
Editor="Martha E. Williams",
Publisher="Elsevier Science Publishers",
Organization=asis,
CallNo="Z699.A1.A65 v.24 1989",
ISSN="0066-4200", LCC="66025096"
}
@Book{AnnRev90,
Title=ARIST,
Volume=25, Year=1990,
Editor="Martha E. Williams",
Publisher="Elsevier Science Publishers",
Organization=asis,
CallNo="Z699.A1.A65 v.25 1990",
ISSN="0066-4200", LCC="66-25096", ISBN="0-444-88531-5"
}
@Book{ARIST91,
Title=ARIST,
Volume=26, Year=1991,
Editor="Martha E. Williams",
Publisher="Learned Information, Inc.",
Organization=asis
}
@Book{AnnRev93,
Title=ARIST,
Volume=28, Year=1993,
Editor="Martha E. Williams",
Publisher="Learned Information, Inc.",
Organization="American Society for Information Science",
CallNo="Z699.A1.A65 v.28 1993",
ISSN="0066-4200", LCC="66-25096", ISBN="0-938734-75-X"
}
%% Collections Published in Books %%
@Book{Society,
Title="The Society of Text: Hypertext, Hypermedia, and the Social
Construction of Information",
Editor="Edward Barrett",
Publisher=MITp, Address="Cambridge, {MA}",
Year=1989,
CallNo="QA76.76.H94 S65 1989"
}
@Book{Akscyn,
Title="Topics on Hypertext",
Editor="R.~Akscyn and F.~Halasz",
Publisher="Addision-Wesley", Year=1991,
Annote="Revised versions of selected papers from the {ACM}
Hypertext'89 conference as well as supplementary material such as
a survey of existing research and commercial hypertext systems --
Nielsen~\cite[pp.208 -- 9]{Ni:Bib90}",
}
@Book{HMandLitStud,
Title="Hypermedia and Literary Studies",
Publisher=MITp,
Year=1991,
Editor="Paul Delany and George P. Landow",
CallNo="PN98.E4 H97 1991"
}
@Book{SemInfoProc,
Editor="Marvin Minsky",
Title="Semantic Information Processing",
Publisher=MITp, Year=1968
}
@Book{KeyInfoScience,
Editor="Belver C. Griffith",
Title="Key Papers in Information Science",
Publisher="Knowledge Industry Publications, Inc.", Year=1980,
Address="White Plains, New York",
Note="Published for the {American Society for Information
Science}",
CallNo="51205 980 00/Z699.K422", LCC="79-24288",
ISBN="0-914236-50-4",
Keyword="\K{Classic}"
}
@Book{Dillon,
Editor="Martin Dillon",
Title="Interfaces for Information Retrieval and Online
Systems The State of the Art",
Publisher="Greenwood Press", Year=1991,
Organization=ASIS,
ISBN="0-313-27494-0", CallNo="Z699.35.U74 I57 1991"
}
@Book{HT+Psych,
Title="Hypertext: A Psychological Perspective",
Editor="C.~McKnight and A.~Dillon and J.~Richardson",
Series="Ellis Horwood Series in Interactive Information Systems",
Publisher="Ellis Horwood Limited", Year=1993,
ISBN="0-13-441643-0",
CallNo="QA76.76.H94 H95 1993",
URL="http://telecaster.lboro.ac.uk/HaPP/contents.html"
}
@Book{DocRetrlSys,
Title="Document Retrieval Systems",
Editor="Peter Willett",
Series="The Foundations of Information Science", Volume=3,
Publisher="Taylor Graham and the Institute of Information
Scientists", Year=1988,
ISBN="0-947568-21-2",
From="SLIS/Elborne College 51350 988 00",
CallNo="SLIS/Elborne College 51350 988 00",
Comment="NOT READ YET"
}
@Book{McAl/Green,
Title= "HYPERTEXT: State of the Art",
Editor="Ray McAleese and Catherine Green",
Publisher="Ablex Publishing Corporation", Year=1990,
CallNo="QA76.76.H94.H967 1990",
ISBN="0-89391-672-2/1-871516-08-0"
}
@Book{McA:HTTiP,
Editor="Ray McAleese",
Title="HYPERTEXT: Theory Into Practice",
Publisher="Blackwell Scientific",
Address="Oxford, {UK}",
Year=1989,
ISBN="1-871516-02-1",
CallNo="QA76.76.H94H97 1989"
}
@Book{IRExperiment,
Editor="Karen {Sparck Jones}",
Title="Information Retrieval Experiment",
Publisher="Butterworth \& Co.", Year=1981,
ISBN="0-408-10648-4",
Annote="Papers about testing IR systems",
SeeAlso="J. Tague-Sutcliffe published a revised version of her
`Information Retrieval Pragmatics' paper in
1993~\cite{TaSu:IRPrag2}"
}
@Book{Handbook,
Title="Hypertext/Hypermedia Handbook",
Series="Software Engineering",
Editor="Emily Berk and Joseph Devlin",
Publisher="Intertext Publications, {McGraw-Hill} Publishing",
Year=1991,
CallNo="QA76.76.H94.H96 1991", ISBN="0-07-016622-6"
}
@Book{SeHi:LiCo,
Editor="Cynthia L. Selfe and Susan Hilligoss",
Title="Literacy and Computers: The Complications of Teaching and
Learning with Technology",
Publisher="The Modern Language Association of America",
Address="10 {Astor} {Place}, {New} {York}, {New} {York} 10003-6981,
{USA}",
Year=1994,
ISBN="0-87352-579-5 (cloth), 0-87352-580-9 (pbk.)"
}
@Book{Ag:IRnHT,
Editor="Maristella Agosti and Alan F. Smeaton",
Title="Information retrieval and hypertext",
Publisher="Kluwer Academic", Year=1996,
CallNo="QA76.76.H94I54 1996"
}
@Book{Oo:CAETP,
Title="Cognitive Aspects of Electronic Text Processing",
Editor="Herre van Oostendorp and Sjaak de Mul",
Publisher="Ablex Publishing Corporation", Year=1996,
Volume="{LVIII}", Series="Advances in Discourse Processes",
Address="355 Chestnut Street, Norwood, New Jersey, 07648, {USA}",
ISBN="1-56750-235-0 (cloth) / 1-56750-236-9 (paper)",
LCC="QA76.9.T48C64 1996",
From="ILL Univ. Saskatchewan"
}
@Book{NiMa:UIM,
Title="Usability Inspection Methods",
Editor="Jakob Nielsen and Robert L. Mack",
Publisher="John Wiley \& Sons", Year=1994,
CallNo="QA76.9.U83N55 1994", ISBN="0-471-01877-5",
Annote="Inspired by the workshop on usability inspection methods
organized by the editors at the ACM CHI '92 conference. Papers
presented at the workshop have been re-worked, not all papers from
the workshop are included, and some not from the workshop appear
too."
}
@Book{Bo:IHCI,
Title="An Introduction to Human-Computer Interaction",
Editor="Paul A. Booth",
Publisher="Lawrence Erlbaum Associates", Year=1989,
Address="Hove, East Sussex, {UK}",
ISBN="0-86377-122-X / 0-86377-123-8 (pbk.)"
}
@Book{No:UCSD,
Title="User Centered System Design: New Perspectives on Human-Computer
Interaction",
Editor="Donald A. Norman and Stephen W. Draper",
Publisher=LEA, Address="Hillsdale, {NJ}, {USA}", Year=1986,
ISBN="0-89859-781-1 (hc) / 0-89859-872-9 (paper)",
CallNo="QA76.9.I58U73"
}
@Book{Ba:HCI2K,
Title="Readings in Human-Computer Interaction: Toward the Year 2000",
Edition="2nd",
Editor="Ronald M. Baecker and Jonathan Grudin and William A. S. Buxton
and Saul Greenberg",
Publisher="Morgan Kaufmann", Year=1995,
ISBN="1-55860-246-1", CallNo="QA76.9.H85R43"
}
@Book{Fr:IRDSnA,
Title="Information Retrieval Data Structures \& Algorithms",
Editor="William B. Frakes and Ricardo Baeza-Yates",
Publisher="Prentice-Hall", Year=1992,
From="Elborne College/SLIS",
ISBN="0-13-463837-9", LCC="92-8197", CallNo="QA76.9.D351543"
}
@Book{HTinContext,
Title="Hypertext in Context",
Editor="Cliff McKnight and Andrew Dillon and John Richardson",
Publisher="Cambridge University Press", Year=1991,
Series="The Cambridge Series on Electronic Publishing",
ISBN="0-521-37488-X",
From="SLIS/Elborne College 51380 991 06",
CallNo="SLIS/Elborne College 51380 991 06",
URL="http://telecaster.lboro.ac.uk/HiC/HiC.html"
}
@Book{Ma:HyperG,
Editor="Hermann Maurer",
Title="Hyper-G now Hyperwave: The Next Generation Web Solution",
Publisher="Addision-Wesley Publishing Company", Year=1996,
ISBN="0-201-40346-3"
,URL="http://www.iicm.tugraz.at/hgbook"
}
@Book{Ha:HHCI,
Editor="Martin G. Helander and Thomas K. Landauer and Prasad V. Prabhu",
Title="Handbook of Human-Computer Interaction",
Publisher="Elsevier Science B.V.", Year=1997, Edition="2nd",
Address = {Amsterdam},
ISBN="0-444-81862-6 (hc) / 0-444-81876-6 (paper)",
CallNo="QA 76.9 H85 H36 1997",
SeeAlso="Selected chapters: \cite{Ma:FNE,Vo:HTII,Wo:HNTNTTMD,Tu:SD}"
}
@Book{Gh:EnHCI
,Editor="Claude Ghaoui"
,Title="Encyclopedia of Human Computer Interaction"
,Publisher="Idea Group Reference"
,Year=2006
,ISBN="1-59140-798-2"
}
@Book{Sa:HHF,
Editor="Gavriel Salvendy",
Title="Handbook of human factors and ergonomics",
Publisher="J. Wiley", Year=1997,
CallNo="TA 166 H275 1997"
}
@Book{vdV:CE14,
Title="Cognitive Ergonomics: Contributions from Experimental
Psychology",
Editor="Gerrit C. {van der Veer} and Sebastiano Bagnara and Gerard
A. M. Kempen",
Year=1992, Number=14, Pages=337,
Publisher="North-Holland, Elsevier Science Publishers",
Note="Based on papers presented at the Fifth European Conference on
Cognitive Ergonomics, Urbino, Italy, September, 1991. Reprinted in
the journal, Acta Psychologica, Volume 78, Numbers 1-3.",
ISBN="0-444-89504-3", CallNo="QA 76.9 H85C643 1992",
Annote="Record from HCIBIB
\url{http://hcibib.org/gs.cgi?terms=E.vanderVeer.92&file=book}",
SeeAlso="Citation for journal version~\cite{CogErg91}"
}
@Book{Ch:NoE,
Editor="Michelene T. H. Chi and Robert Glaser and Marshall J. Farr",
Title="The Nature of Expertise",
Publisher=LEA, Year=1988, Address="Hillsdale, {NJ}, {USA}",
CallNo="BF 323 E2 N37 1988",
ISBN="0-8058-0404-8 (on back cover), 0-89859-711-0 (on p.~iii)",
SeeAlso="Individual chapters~\cite{Gl:ONE,Po:INE,Jo:EDUU,Vo:SISP}",
Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@Book{Di:IDIC1,
Editor="Ronna F. Dillon and Ronald R. Schmeck",
Title="Individual Differences in Cognition",
Volume=1,
Publisher="Academic Press, Inc.", Year=1983,
ISBN="0-12-216401-4", CallNo="BF 311 I5 1983 v.1"
}
@Book{Di:IDC2,
Editor="Ronna F. Dillon",
Title="Individual Differences in Cognition",
Volume=2,
Publisher="Academic Press, Inc.", Year=1985,
ISBN="0-12-216402-4", CallNo="BF 311 I5 1983 v.2"
}
@Book{Go:CTiSHI,
Editor="Barbara Gorayska and Jacob L. Mey",
Title="Cognitive Technology: In Search of a Humane Interface",
Publisher="Elsevier Science B.V.", Year=1996,
Series="Advances in Psychology", Number=113,
ISBN="0-444-82275-5", CallNo="BF 311 C55346 1996",
}
@Book{ChOB:HHFTE
,Title="Handbook of Human Factors Testing and Evaluation"
,Editor="Samuel G. Charlton and Thoma O'Brien"
,Edition="2nd"
,Publisher="Lawrence Erlbaum Associates"
,Year=2002
,ISBN="0-8058-3291-2"
}
@Book{Ch:WW
,Author="Chun Wei Choo and Brian Detlor and Don Turnbull"
,Title="Web Work: Information Seeking and Knowledge Work on the
{World Wide Web}"
,BookTitle="Web Work: Information Seeking and Knowledge Work on the
{World Wide Web}"
,Publisher="Kluwer Academic Publishers"
,Series="Information Science and Knowledge Management"
,Year=2000
,ISBN="0-77923-6460-0"
,LCC="ZA 4201.C48 2000"
}
@Book{Da:SC88,
Editor="J. Davis and M. Kritchevsky and U. Bellugi",
Title="Spatial cognition: Brain bases and development",
Year = 1988,
Address = "Hillsdale, {NJ}",
Publisher = "Lawrence Erlbaum Associates",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@misc{PERSONApubs,
Author= {Swedish Institute of Computer Science},
Title= "Towards a Framework for Design and Evaluation of Navigation in Electronic Spaces",
URL="\url{http://www.sics.se/humle/projects/persona/web/littsurvey/abstracts.html}"
}
@Book{Go:STRGIS
,Title="Spatial and Temporal Reasoning in Geographic Information
Systems"
,Editor="Max J. Egenhofer and Reginald G. Golledge"
,Year=1998
,Publisher="Oxford University Press"
,ISBN="0-19-510342-4"
,Keywords="\K{spatial ability}"
}
@Book{Ho:HCTD
,Title="Handbook of Cognitive Task Design"
,Editor="Erik Hollnagel"
,ISBN="0-8058-4003-6"
,Publisher="Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc."
,Address="Mahwah, {NJ}"
,Year=2003
,LCC="TA167.H35 2003"
}
@Book{Sh:CHVST
,Title="The {C}ambridge Handbook of Visuospatial Thinking"
,Editor="Priti Shah and Akira Miyake"
,ISBN="0-521-00173-0"
,Publisher="Cambridge University Press" ,Address="{NY}, {NY}"
,Year=2005
,LCC="BF316.6.C36 2005"
}
@Book{Er:CHEEP
,Title="The Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance"
,Editor="K. Anders Ericsson and Neil Charness and Paul J. Feltovich
and Robert R. Hoffman"
,Publisher="Cambridge University Press" ,Year=2006
,ISBN="052184097X"
,Keyword="\K{Expertise}"
}
@Book{Ho:CHTaR
,Title="The Cambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning"
,Editor="Keith J. Holyoak and Robert G. Morrison"
,Publisher="Cambridge University Press" ,Year=2005
,ISBN="978-0-521-53101-6"
,Keyword="\K{spatial ability} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@Book{Ho:DISTNA
,Title="Designing Information Spaces: The Social Navigation
Approach"
,Series="Computer supported cooperative work"
,Editor="Kristina H{\"{o}}{\"{o}}k and David Benyon and Alan
J. Munro"
,Publisher="Springer-Verlag London Limited"
,Year=2003
,ISBN="1-85233-661-7"
}
@Book{Mu:SNIS
,Title="Social Navigation of Information Space"
,Series="Computer supported cooperative work"
,Editor="Alan J. Munro and Kristina H{\"{o}}{\"{o}}k and David
Benyon"
,CallNo="QA76.9 C66 S625 1999" ,ISBN="1-85233-090-2"
,Publisher="Springer-Verlag London Limited"
,Year=1999
}
@Book{Na:EofCogSci
,Title="Encyclopedia of cognitive science"
,Editor="Lynn Nadel"
,Address="London"
,Publisher="Nature Publishing Group" ,Year=2003
,ISBN="0333792610" ,LCC="BF311 E52 2003"
,Note="In four volumes"
}
@Book{Ma:CRPTone
,Title="Commissioned reviews of 250 psychological tests"
,Editor="John Maltby and Christopher Alan Lewis and Andrew Hill"
,Address="Lewiston, {NY}"
,Publisher="E. Mellen Press"
,Year=2000
,Series="Mellen studies in psychology"
,Volume=1 ,ISBN="0773474528"
,SeeAlso="\cite{Ma:Tests} are un-reviewed tests"
}
@Book{Ma:CRPTtwo
,Title="Commissioned reviews of 250 psychological tests"
,Editor="John Maltby and Christopher Alan Lewis and Andrew Hill"
,Address="Lewiston, {NY}"
,Publisher="E. Mellen Press"
,Year=2000
,Series="Mellen studies in psychology"
,Volume=2 ,ISBN="0773474544"
,SeeAlso="\cite{Ma:Tests} are un-reviewed tests"
}
@Book{Ma:Tests
,Title="Tests: A comprehensive reference for assessments in
psychology, education, and business"
,Editor="Taddy Maddox"
,Edition="Fifth" ,Year=2003
,Publisher="Pro-Ed" ,Address="Austin, {TX}"
,LCC="BF 176 T43 2003"
,ISBN="0890798974 (hardcover)/ 0890799083 (paper)"
,SeeAlso="\cite{Ma:CRPTone} and \cite{Ma:CRPTtwo} include reviews of
the tests"
}
@Book{We:HBoPsych
,Title="Handbook of Psychology"
,Editor="Irving B. Weiner and Donald K. Freedheim and John
A. Schinka and Wayne F. Velicer"
,Publisher="Wiley" ,Address="New York" ,Year=2003
,ISBN="0471176699 (12 vol. set: alk. paper) /
0471666750 (12 vol. set: pbk)"
,LCC="BF 121 H1955 2003"
}
@Book{We:HBoPsych:4ExpPsych
,Title="Experimental Psychology"
,Volume=4 ,Series="Handbook of Psychology"
,Editor="Alice F. Healy and Robert W. Proctor and Irving B. Weiner"
,Publisher="Wiley" ,Address="New York" ,Year=2003
,LCC="BF 121 H1955 2003 v.4"
}
@Book{Ma:GISpa
,Editor="Paul A. Longley and Michael F. Goodchild and David
J. Maguire and David W. Rhind"
,Title="Geographical Information Systems: Principles and
applications"
,Publisher="Wiley \& Sons, Inc."
,Year=1999 ,Edition="2nd"
}
@Book{Za:AiH
,Title="Advances in Haptics"
,Editor="Mehrdad Hosseini Zadeh"
,Publisher="InTech"
,Year=2010
,ISBN="978-953-307-093-3"
,URL="http://www.intechopen.com/books/show/title/advances-in-haptics"
}
@Misc{ACMDL,
Key="Association for Computing Machinery Digital Library",
Title="Association for Computing Machinery Digital Library",
URL="http://acm.org/dl/",
Note="Searching is free, full-text requires extra payment"
}
@Misc{Blu:comp.graphics,
URL="ftp://ftp.csd.uwo.ca/pub/papers/webber/HypertextEvaluation/BlusteinThesisData",
Year=1986,
Key="comp.graphics"
}
@Misc{Ba:HTRev,
Author="V. Balasubramanian",
Title="State of the Art Review on Hypermedia Issues and
Applications",
HowPublished="\url{http://brie.cs.sfu.ca/%7educhier/misc/hypertext_review/}",
Note="Also available as \url{ftp://ftp.isg.sfu.ca/pub/duchier/HT.tar.gz}",
Month="30 " # jul, Year="1995",
Keyword="\K{Review}"
}
@Misc{W3,
Key="WorldWideWebProject",
Title="The World Wide Web project",
HowPublished="{WWW} address \url{http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/TheProject.html}"
}
@Misc{Br:WebConv,
Author="Richard Brandwein and Mike Sendall",
Title="{HTML} Converters",
Year=1993,
URL="http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Tools/Filters.html"
}
@InCollection{Be:W3:DfnLink,
Author="T.~Berners-Lee and D.~Connolly",
Title="Terms",
BookTitle="Hypertext Markup Language --- 2.0",
Publisher="The World Wide Web Consortium",
Year="1995", Month=dec,
URL="http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/html-spec/html-spec_2.html#GLOSS19"
}
@Misc{Wa:WhatsWWW,
Author="Joseph Wang",
Title="{ANNOUNCING}: {tkWWW} 0.3 {Alpha}",
HowPublished="Usenet Message-ID
$\langle$\path{1992Aug30.232318.13727@athena.mit.edu}$\rangle$,
cross-posted to comp.lang.tcl, alt.hypertext, comp.windows.x and
comp.lang.sgml",
Month=aug, Year=1992,
Address="$\langle$\path{joe@athena.mit.edu}$\rangle$"
}
@Misc{Pe:HTDefn,
Author="Jean-Francois Petit",
Title="{Definition of Hyertext}[sic]",
HowPublished="Usenet Message-ID
$\langle$\path{petitjf.744937089@mistral.ERE.UMontreal.CA}$\rangle$,
posted to alt.hypertext",
Month=aug, Year=1993,
Address="$\langle$\url{petitjf@ere.umontreal.ca}$\rangle$",
Annote="Quotations, from various published sources, of hypertext",
Keyword="\K{Definition}"
}
@Misc{Fi:HyperUsenet,
Author="David K. Fickes",
Title="{Usenet in Hypertext form}",
HowPublished="Usenet Message-ID
$\langle$\path{8711130839.AA02525@bucsb.bu.edu}$\rangle$, posted
to comp.society.futures",
Month=nov, Year=1987,
Note="Obtained using anonymous ftp from site \url{nl.cs.cmu.edu}
(Internet protocol (IP) address \path{128.2.222.56}) in directory
\path{/usr/toad/hypertext}. File name
\path{hyperusenet.proposal.1}",
Address="$\langle$\path{einstein\%bucsb.ARPA@bu.EDU}$\rangle$"
}
@Misc{Be:OpenHT,
Author="Mark Bernstein",
Title="{Re: What is `open hypertext'?}",
HowPublished="Usenet Message-ID
$\langle$\path{Bernstein-0601960955220001@slip-5-2.shore.net}$\rangle$,
posted to alt.hypertext",
Month=jan, Year=1996,
Address="$\langle$\url{Bernstein@eastgate.com}$\rangle$",
Keyword="\K{Definition}"
}
@Misc{Ka:CORPORA,
Author="Mark Kantrowitz",
Title="{FAQ: Artificial Intelligence FTP Resources 6/6 [Monthly posting]}",
Month="13 " # may, Year=1996,
HowPublished="Cross-posted to the \url{comp.ai},
\path{news.answers}, and \path{comp.answers} newsgroups with
message-{ID} $\langle$\url{AI_6_831988938@CS.CMU.EDU}$\rangle$",
Annote="In the section labelled
\texttt{Subject: [6-3] Where can I get a machine readable dictionary,
thesaurus, and other text corpora?} it says:
\begin{quotation}\noindent
CORPORA is a mailing list for Text Corpora. It welcomes
information and questions about text corpora such as
availability, aspects of compiling and using corpora,
software, tagging, parsing, and bibliography. To be added to
the list, send a message to
\path{corpora-request@x400.hd.uib.no}. Contributions should
be sent to \url{corpora@x400.hd.uib.no}.
\end{quotation}",
Note="Author's e-mail address is $\langle$\path{mkant+@cs.cmu.edu}$\rangle$"
}
@Unpublished{Va:OHT,
Author="Adrian J Vanzyl and Branko Cesnik",
Title="Open Hypertext Systems: An Examination of Requirements, and
Analysis of Implementation Strategies, comparing {Microcosm},
{HyperTED} and the {World Wide Web}",
URL="http://www.inf-wiss.uni-konstanz.de/Res/openhypermedia.html",
Year=1994,
Note="Copyright by the Association for Computing Machinery"
}
@Misc{Be:Link-Types,
Author="Tim Berners-Lee and Daniel Connolly",
Title="Hypertext Markup Language A Representation of Textual
Information and Meta Information for Retrieval and Interchange",
Organization="World Wide Web",
Edition="15 {March} 1993 version",
Note="\url{http://www.csd.uwo.ca/%7ejamie/.Refs/link-types.html} by
J. Blustein has a verbatim transcription of the section entitled
`Link Relationship Values'"
}
@Manual{Be:HTML,
Author="Tim Berners-Lee and Daniel Connolly",
Title="Hypertext Markup Language: {A} Representation of Textual
Information and Meta Information for Retrieval and Interchange",
Organization="World Wide Web",
Edition="15 {March} 1993 version",
Note="This hypertext document has WWW address
\url{http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/MarkUp.html}.
It can be read by connecting to \path{info.cern.ch} (Internet
protocol (IP) address \path{128.141.201.74}) with telnet."
}
%% Project Gutenberg Etexts
@Book{Ca:LookingGlass,
Author="{Lewis Carrol [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson]}",
Title="Through the Looking Glass",
Publisher="Project Gutenberg", Year=1991,
Chapter="VI {Humpty Dumpty}",
Note="The Millennium Fulcrum Edition 1.7",
URL="ftp://mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu//pub/etext/etext91/lglass18.zip",
Annote="used for definition example"
}
@Misc{Do:Webmap,
Author="Peter D{\"{o}}mel",
Title="{Webmap} --- A Graphical Hypertext Navigation Tool",
Month=may # " 20", Year=1994,
Address="Department of Computer Science, J.W. Goethe-University
Frankfurt / Main,
\path{}",
}
@Misc{UIE:Arts,
Author="User Interface Engineering",
Title="Articles and Other Resources",
URL="http://www.world.std.com/%7euieweb/moreart.com",
Note="articles reprinted from User Interface Engineering's newsletter
`Eye for Design'~\cite{UIE:EfD}.",
Keyword="\K{HCI!Intro}",
}
@Misc{HF:Kin09
,Author="Kath Straub"
,Title="Kindle2: Crack for readers\ldots until you start reading"
,HowPublished="Human Factors International User Interface Design Newsletter"
,Month=feb#"/"#mar ,Year=2009
,URL="http://www.humanfactors.com/downloads/FebMar09nNewsletter.pdf"
,Keyword="\K{Reading}"
}
@article {springerlink:10.1007/s11412-008-9040-x,
author = {Wolfe, Joanna},
affiliation = {University of Louisville HM 315 Louisville KY 40292 USA},
title = {Annotations and the collaborative digital library: Effects of an aligned annotation interface on student argumentation and reading strategies},
journal = {International Journal of Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning},
publisher = {Springer New York},
issn = {1556-1607},
keyword = {Humanities, Social Sciences and Law},
pages = {141-164},
volume = {3},
issue = {2},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11412-008-9040-x},
note = {10.1007/s11412-008-9040-x},
abstract = {Recent research on annotation interfaces provides provocative evidence that anchored, annotation-based discussion environments may lead to better conversations about a text. However, annotation interfaces raise complicated tradeoffs regarding screen real estate and positioning. It is argued that solving this screen real estate problem requires limiting the number of annotations displayed to users. In order to understand which annotations have the most learning value for students, this paper presents two complementary studies examining the effects of annotations on students performing a reading-to-write task. The first study used think-aloud protocols and a within-subjects methodology, finding that annotations appeared to provoke students to reflect more critically upon the primary text. This effect was particularly strong when students encountered pairs of annotations presenting different viewpoints on the same section of text. Student interviews suggested that annotations were most helpful when they caused the reader to consider and weigh conflicting viewpoints. The second study used a between-subjects methodology and a more naturalistic task to provide complementary evidence that annotations encourage more reflective responses to a text. This study found that students who received annotated materials both perceived themselves and were perceived by instructors as less reliant on unreflective summary strategies than students who received the same content but in a different format. These findings indicate that the learning value of an annotation lies in its ability to provoke students to consider and weigh new perspectives on the primary text. When selected effectively, annotations provide a critical scaffolding that can support students’ critical thinking and argumentation activities. Collaborative digital libraries and applications for the Web 2.0 should be designed with this learning framework in mind.},
year = {2008}
}
@SpecialIssue{CS:Dec99,
Key="{ACM} Computing Surveys",
Journal="{ACM} Computing Surveys",
Year=1999, Month=dec, Volume=31, Number=4,
Organization="Association for Computing Machinery",
ISSN="0360-0300", LCCN="sc 76000799",
SeeAlso="Electronic Symposium on HT and HM~\cite{As:CSESHTM}",
Keyword="\K{HT}"
}
@SpecialIssue{int:HCISEC2k6,
Key="interactionsHCISEC",
Journal=int,
Month=may#" + "#jun, Year=2006, Volume = 13, Number = 3,
Editor = "Ryan West",
Note = "{HCI} and security",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item \cite{Ku:DEMSUI}
\item \cite{Ha:ECSDM}
\item \cite{DeW:IUSAO}
\item \cite{FC:WDTI}
\item \cite{Si:ITSPOIST}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{Security}"
}
@SpecialIssue{IE3Comp:Jan88,
Key="IEEEComputer",
Journal="{IEEE Computer}",
Month=jan, Year=1988, Volume=21, Number=1,
Comment="NOT YET READ --- Nielsen\cite[p.205]{Ni:Bib90}",
Keyword="\K{HT}"
}
@SpecialIssue{TOIS:Jan89,
Key="OIS",
Journal="{ACM} Transactions on {OIS}",
Month=jan, Year=1989, Volume=7, Number=1,
Comment="NOT YET READ --- Nielsen\cite[p.205]{Ni:Bib90}",
Keyword="\K{HT}"
}
@SpecialIssue{Byte:Oct88,
Key="Byte",
Journal="{BYTE}",
Month=oct, Year=1988,
Topic="Hypertext",
SeeAlso="introductory editorial~\cite{Ta:ID}",
Keyword="\K{HT}"
}
@SpecialIssue{Queue:Mar03,
Key="Queue",
Journal="{ACM} Queue",
Editor="James Maurer",
Month=mar, Year=2003,
Volume=1, Number=1,
Topic="Web Services",
Keywords="\K{web services}"
}
@SpecialIssue{Queue:Apr04,
Key="Queue",
Journal="{ACM} Queue",
Editor="Edward Grossman",
Month=apr, Year=2004,
Volume=2, Number=2,
Topic="Web Search Engines",
Keywords="\K{search engines} $\bullet$ \K{IR} $\bullet$ \K{CS4173 (WWW)}"
}
@SpecialIssue{SysAdmin:Aug02,
Key="SysAdmin",
Journal="{SysAdmin}",
Editor="Amber Ankerholz",
Month=aug, Year=2002,
Volume=11, Number=8,
Topic="Intrusion Detection",
Keywords="\K{Security}"
}
@SpecialIssue{SysAdmin:Mar03,
Key="SysAdmin",
Journal="{SysAdmin}",
Editor="Amber Ankerholz",
Month=mar, Year=2003,
Volume=12, Number=3,
Topic="Network Security",
Keywords="\K{Security}"
}
@SpecialIssue{CACM:Aug95,
Journal=cacm, Volume=38, Number=8, Month=aug, Year=1995,
Title="Hypermedia Design",
Editor="Michael Bieber and Tom\'{a}s Isakowitz",
Key="Michael Bieber and Tom\'{a}s Isakowitz",
URL="\url{http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/208344.208345}",
SeeAlso="e-version~\cite{Bi:CACMAug95}"
}
@SpecialIssue{JASIS:Apr00,
Journal=JASIS, Volume=51, Number=6, Month=apr, Year=2000,
Editor="Chaomei Chen and Mary Czerwinski and Robert Macredie",
Title="Individual Differences In Virtual Environments",
Key="Chaomei Chen, Mary Czerwinski, Robert Macredie",
URL="http://www.asis.org/Publications/JASIS/vol51n0600.html",
Keyword="\K{individual differences}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item overview and introduction~\cite{Ch:IDVEO}
\item Allen~\cite{Al:IDCUCD}
\item Dillon~\cite{Di:SSHUDSIS}
\item Ford~\cite{Fo:CSVE}
\end{itemize}"
}
@SpecialIssue{Ergo:TA98,
Journal="Ergonomics", Volume=41, Number=11, Month=nov, Year=1998,
Editor="John Annett and Neville A. Stanton",
Title="Task Analysis",
Key="Annett, Stanton",
ISSN="ISSN 0014-0139",
URL="http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/tandf/terg/1998/00000041/00000011",
Keyword="\K{task\_analysis}",
}
@SpecialIssue{CACM:Jul88,
Key="CACM",
Journal=cacm, Month=jul, Year=1988, Volume=31, Number=7,
Topic="Hypertext",
SeeAlso="\cite{Sm:CACMIntro}",
Keyword="\K{HT}"
}
@SpecialIssue{CACM:Feb94,
Key="CACM",
Journal=cacm, Month=feb, Year=1994, Volume=37, Number=2,
Editor="Kaj Gr{\o}nb{\ae}k and Randall H. Trigg",
Topic="Hypermedia",
Keyword="\K{Hypermedia}"
}
@SpecialIssue{WT:UE,
Key="User Experience",
Topic="User Experience",
Journal="Web Techniques~\cite{WebTechs}",
Volume=6, Number=2, Month=feb, Year=2001
}
@SpecialIssue{CACM:Apr95,
Journal=cacm, Volume=38, Number=4, Month=apr, Year=1995,
Topic="Digital Libraries",
Editor="Edward A. Fox and Robert M. Akscyn and Richard K. Furuta and
John J. Leggett",
Key="Edward A. Fox and Robert M. Akscyn and Richard K. Furuta and John
J. Leggett",
SeeAlso="May 2001 issue~\cite{CACM:May01}",
Keyword="\K{DL}"
}
@SpecialIssue{CACM:May01,
Journal=cacm, Volume=44, Number=5, Month=may, Year=2001,
Topic="Digital Libraries",
Editor="Edward A Fox and Gary Marchionini",
Key="Edward A Fox and Gary Marchionini",
SeeAlso="April 1995 issue~\cite{CACM:Apr95}",
Keyword="\K{DL}"
}
@SpecialIssue{IJHCS:Jul05,
Key="International Journal of Human-Computer Studies",
Journal="International Journal of Human-Computer Studies",
Year=2005, Month=jul, Volume=63, Number="1--2", Pages="1--270",
Editor="C. Karat and J. Karat and C. Brodie",
Note="Contents: \url{http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WGR-4GJ0D2P-2/2/05277044c863277eb04801311bf84d28}"
}
@WholeJournal{BandIT,
Key="BIT",
Title="Behaviour \& Inforamtion Technology",
ISSN="0144-929X (print) / 1362-3001 (online)",
Publisher="Taylor \& Francis Ltd.",
Url="http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/tf/0951192X.html"
}
@WholeJournal{Hypermedia,
Key="Hypermedia",
Title="Hypermedia",
Year="1989 -- 1994",
Publisher="Taylor Graham Publishing",
Address="London, United Kingdom",
Note="Continued as The New Review of Hypermedia and
Multimedia~\cite{NRHMM}",
ISSN="0955-8543"
}
@WholeJournal{NRHMM,
Key="The New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia",
Title="The New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia",
Editor="Douglas Tudhope",
Year="1994--",
Publisher="Taylor Graham Publishing",
Address="London, United Kingdom",
ISSN="1361-4568",
URL="http://www.comp.glam.ac.uk/%7ENRHM/",
}
@WholeJournal{JoDI,
Key="JoDI",
Title="Journal of Digital Information",
Editor="Cliff McKnight",
ISSN="1368-7506",
HowPublished="\url{http://jodi.ecs.soton.ac.uk/}",
Note="A peer-reviewed electronic journal supported by the British
Computer Society and Oxford University Press, maintained in the
Multimedia Research Group, University of Southampton, United Kingdom"
}
@WholeJournal{IJHCS,
Key="IJHCS",
Title="International Journal of Human-Computer Studies",
ISSN="1071-5819",
Note="Continuation of International Journal of Man-Machine Studies",
Publisher="Academic Press",
Editor="B. R. Gaines"
}
@WholeJournal{interactions,
Key="interactions",
Title="{interactions}",
Year="1994--",
Publisher="Association for Computing Machinery",
Address="New York, {NY}",
ISSN="1072-5220"
}
@WholeJournal{TOCHI,
Key="ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction",
Title="{ACM} Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction",
Year="1994--",
Publisher="Association for Computing Machinery",
Address="New York, {NY}"
}
@WholeJournal{TOIS,
Key="ACM Transactions on Information Systems",
Title="{ACM} Transactions on Information Systems",
Publisher="Association for Computing Machinery",
Address="New York, {NY}"
}
@WholeJournal{IJDL,
Key="International Journal on Digital Libraries",
Title="International Journal on Digital Libraries",
Publisher="Springer",
Address="Germany",
Editor="N. R. Adam and Y. Yesha",
ISSN="1432-5012 (printed version), 1432-1300 (electronic version)",
URL="http://link.springer.de/link/service/journals/00799/"
}
@WholeJournal{JEHM,
Key="Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia",
Title="Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia",
Publisher="Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education",
Editor="Gary H. Marks",
ISSN="1055-8896",
URL="http://www.aace.org/pubs/jemh/"
}
@WholeJournal{WebTechs,
Key="WebTechniques",
Title="Web Techniques",
Publisher="{CMP} Media Inc.",
Address="600 Harrison Street, San Francisco, {CA}, {USA}",
ISSN="1086-556X",
URL="http://www.webtechniques.com/"
}
@WholeJournal{UIE:EfD,
Key="Eye for Design",
Title="Eye for Design",
Editor="Jared M. Spool",
ISSN="1095-2594",
Publisher="User Interface Engineering, Inc.,
800~Turnpike St., Ste.~101,
North Andover, {MA} 01854, {USA}",
URL="http://www.uie.com/",
SeeAlso="Sample articles~\cite{UIE:Arts} and related special issue of
WebTechs~\cite{WT:UE}",
Keyword="\K{HCI}"
}
@WholeJournal{IJHCInt,
Key="IJHCI",
Title="International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction",
Editor="Kay M. Stanney, Gavriel Salvendy, Masamitsu Oshima",
Publisher="Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.",
ISSN="1044-7318",
URL="http://www.erlbaum.com/Journals/journals/IJHCI/ijhci.htm",
Note="Not to be confused with IJHCS~\cite{IJHCS}"
}
@WholeJournal{IntCom,
Key="Interacting With Computers",
Title="Interacting With Computers",
Publisher="Elsevier",
ISSN="0953-5438",
URL="http://www.elsevier.com/locate/intcom/"
}
@WholeJournal{IR,
Key="Information Retrieval",
Title="Information Retrieval",
Editor="Paul B. Kantor and Stephen E. Robertson",
Publisher="Kluwer",
ISSN="1386-4564",
URL="http://www.wkap.nl/journals/ir/"
}
@WholeJournal{AppErgo,
Key="Applied Ergonomics",
Title="Applied Ergonomics: Human Factors in Technology and Society",
URL="http://www.elsevier.nl/locate/issn/00036870/",
ISSN="0003-6870"
}
@WholeJournal{JASIS,
Key="Journal of the American Association for Information Science and
Technology",
Title="Journal of the {American} {Association} for {Information Science}
and {Technology}",
Editor="Donald H. Kraft",
URL="http://www.asis.org/Publications/JASIS/",
Organization="American Society for Information Science and Technology",
Publisher="John Wiley \& Sons, Inc.",
ISSN="Online 1532-2890 / Print 1532-2882",
CallNo="Z1008 A51",
Note="Formerly Journal of the American Association for Information
Science"
}
@WholeJournal{ComputSurv,
Key="{ACM} Computing Surveys",
Title="{ACM} Computing Surveys",
Publisher="Association for Computing Machinery",
ISSN="0360-0300", LCCN="sc 76000799",
CallNo="QA 76.5 C617",
URL="http://www.acm.org/pubs/contents/journals/surveys/"
}
@WholeJournal{EyeForDesign,
Key="{User Interface Engineering's Eye For Design}",
Title="Eye For Design",
Publisher="User Interface Engineering, Inc.",
Address="800 Turnpike St., Ste.~101, North Andover, {MA} 01845, {USA}",
ISSN="1095-2594",
URL="http://world.std.com/%7Euieweb/moreart.htm"
}
@WholeJournal{Color
,Editor="Ellen C. Carter" ,Key="Color"
,Title="Color: Research \& Application"
,Publisher="Wiley Periodicals, Inc."
,URL="http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/35037/home"
,ISSN="1520-6378 (print) / 0361-2317 (electronic)"
}
@WholeJournal{Perception
,Key="Perception"
,Title="Perception"
,Publisher="Pion"
,URL="http://www.perceptionweb.com/"
,ISSN="0301-0066 (print) / 1468-4233 (electronic)"
}
@Misc{FMA99
,Title="The Financial Modernization Act of 1999, Public Law 106-102"
,Note="also known as Gramm-Leach-Bliley ({GLB}) {Act})"
,Author="Gramm and Leach and Bliley"
,Year=1999
,URL="\url{http://www.ftc.gov/privacy/glbact/glbsub1.htm}"
}
@InProceedings{Wo:EASRW
,Author = "Joanna L. Wolfe"
,Title = "Effects of annotations on student readers and writers"
,BookTitle = "Proceedings of the fifth {ACM} conference on Digital
libraries"
,Year = 2000
,ISBN = "1-58113-231-X"
,Pages = 19#" -- "#26
,Location = "San Antonio, {TX}"
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/336597.336620"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address="New York, {NY}"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:ERPP
,Title="Exploring the relationship between personal and public
annotations"
,Author="Catherine C. Marshall and A. J. Bernheim Brush"
,BookTitle="Proceedings of the 2004 joint {ACM}/{IEEE} conference on
Digital libraries"
,Year=2004 ,Month="07 -- 11 "#jun ,Address="Tucson, {AZ}, {USA}"
,Pages=349#" -- "#357
,Publisher={ACM}
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/996350.996432"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Wr:CogPros,
Title="Cognitive Overheads and Prostheses: Some Issues in Evaluating
Hypertexts",
Author="Patricia Wright",
Pages=1#" -- "#12,
BookTitle="Hypertext '91 Third {ACM} Conference on Hypertext
Proceedings",
Publisher="Association for Computing Machinery",
Organization="ACM",
Month="15 -- 18 " # dec, Year=1991,
ISBN="0-89791-461-9",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/122974.122975",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Classic!perhaps?}"
}
@Article{Bl:CODI,
Author="A. Black and P. Wright and D. Black and K. Norman",
Title="Consulting on-line dictionary information while reading",
Journal="Hypermedia",
Volume=4, Number=3, Year=1992,
Annote="Official abstract at
\url{http://www.comp.glam.ac.uk/~NRHM/h-volume4/ha-1992-7.htm}",
SeeAlso="\cite{Wr:jump} and \cite{Wr:CogPros}"
}
@InCollection{Wr:EC2NS,
Title="An empirical comparison of two navigation systems for two
hypertexts",
Author="Patricia Wright and Ann Lickorish",
Chapter=9, Pages=84#" -- "#93,
BookTitle= "HYPERTEXT: State of the Art",
Editor="Ray McAleese and Catherine Green",
Publisher="Ablex Publishing Corporation", Year=1990,
CallNo="QA76.76.H94.H967 1990",
ISBN="0-89391-672-2/1-871516-08-0"
}
@InProceedings{Bl:PGWht
,Author = "James Blustein and Mona Noor"
,Title = "Personal glossaries on the {WWW}: an exploratory study
(Hypertext)"
,BookTitle = "{DocEng} '04: Proceedings of the 2004 {ACM} symposium on
Document engineering"
,Year = 2004
,ISBN = "1-58113-938-1"
,Pages = 54#" -- "#56
,Location = "Milwaukee, {WI}"
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1030397.1030409"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
}
@Book{Sa:HTRB,
Author="Eileen E. Sargent and Helen Huus and Oliver Andresen",
Title="How to Read a Book",
Publisher="International Reading Association",
Address="Newark, Delaware, {USA}",
Series="Reading Aids",
SeriesEditor="Charles T. Mangrum",
Note="An {IRA} Service Bulletin, Second printing (March~1971)",
Year=1970
}
@Book{Ad:HTRaB
,Author="Mortimer J. Adler and Charles {van Doren}"
,Title="How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent
Reading"
,Publisher="Simon \& Schuster, Inc." ,Year=1972
,Address="Toronto"
,ISBN="0-671-212209-5"
}
@UnPublished{ChignellNotes,
Author="Mark Chignell and Bernd Nordhausen",
Title="Text to Hypertext Conversion: A Practical Engineering
Approach Course Outline",
Year="\copyright 1993",
Note="Provided by Mark H. Chignell"
}
@Misc{QUIS5.5b,
Title="{QUIS} 5.5b: The Questionnaire for User Interaction
Satsfaction",
Key="QUIS5.5b",
Note="\copyright University of Maryland Human-Computer Interaction
Laboratory",
HowPublished="Available for licence from University of Maryland's
Office of Technology Liaison.",
Year=1994,
SeeAlso="QUIS 7.0~\cite{QUIS}"
}
@Misc{QUIS,
Title="{QUIS} 7.0: The Questionnaire for User Interaction
Satsfaction",
Key="QUIS7.0",
Note="\copyright University of Maryland Human-Computer Interaction
Laboratory\\\url{http://lap.umd.edu/quisfolder/quishome.html}",
HowPublished="Available for licence from University of Maryland's
Office of Technology Liaison.",
Year=1994,
SeeAlso="Sauro and Kindlund's A method to standardize usability
metrics into a single score~\cite{Sa:MSUMSS}"
}
@Misc{M.Bernstein,
Author="Mark Bernstein",
Title="Personal communication",
HowPublished="e-mail",
Month="8 " # jun, Year=1993,
Comment="Message-Id %
$\langle$\path{Pine.3.07.9306081801.A6098-a100000@world.std.com}$\rangle$"
}
@Misc{M.B.3Feb1997,
Author="Mark Bernstein",
Title="Personal communication",
HowPublished="e-mail",
Month="3~" # feb, Year=1997,
Comment="Message-Id %
$\langle$\path{v03010d02af1bb9f084be@[204.167.103.204]}$\rangle$"
}
@Misc{Rob.Jackson,
Author="Rob Jackson",
Title="Personal communication",
Month="1~" # may, Year=1996,
Note="Jackson was then the manager of the Statlab in the
department of Statistical and Actuarial Science at the
University of Western Ontario"
}
@Misc{R.J.Followup,
Author="Rob Jackson",
Title="Personal communication",
Month="11~" # jun, Year=1996,
Note="Jackson was then the manager of the Statlab in the
department of Statistical and Actuarial Science at UWO"
}
@Misc{ETomsPropTalk,
Author="Elaine Toms",
Title="{GSLIS} Colloquium: Faciliting the Browsing of
Electronic Text",
Month="29~" # may, Year=1996,
Note="Toms was then a Ph.D. student at the University of Western
Ontario. She presented aspects of her doctoral thesis proposal."
}
@Misc{ElaineLunch,
Author="Elaine Toms",
Title="Personal communication",
Month="30~" # may, Year=1996,
Note="Toms was a Ph.D. student in the Graduate School of Library
and Information Science at the University of Western Ontario
and a Professor in the School of Library and Information
Studies at Dalhousie University. Her research is largely
about user interface issues in hypertext-like computerized
information systems."
}
@Misc{J.B.11Nov98,
Author="Jon Baskerville",
Title="Personal communication",
HowPublished="e-mail",
Month="11~" # nov, Year=1998,
E-mail-Subject="Re: URGENT: More questions about analysis
(F-values \& SAS output) - Reply"
}
@Misc{K.I.15Jan99,
Author="Keith Instone",
Title="Personal communication",
Month="15~" # jan, Year= 1999
}
@UnPublished{M.S'ley.18Feb99,
Author="Mark S Staveley",
Title="Hypertext Linking",
Month="18~" # feb, Year=1999,
HowPublished="e-mail",
Note="e-mail message"
}
@UnPublished{StatsLabRep,
Author="Jon Baskerville and Lamia Abid",
Title="Subject: Statistical comparison of hypertext links
generated by rules",
Month="16~" # sep, Year=1998,
Note="Microsoft Word document sent by e-mail"
}
@Proceedings{OIS90,
Title="Conference on {OIS}",
Month=apr, Year=1990,
Editor="Fredrick H. Lochovsky and Robert B. Allen",
Note="Published in {SIG OIS Bulletin v.11}",
CallNo="HF5547.5.A1A886 v.11"
}
@Proceedings{HT:CSnA,
Title="Hypertext: Concepts, Systems and Applications",
Editor="N.~Streitz and A.~Rizk and J.~Andr\'e",
Month=nov, Year=1990,
Organization="INRIA, France",
Publisher="Cambridge University Press",
Series="The Cambridge Series on Electronic Publishing",
Note="{Proceedings of the First European Conference on Hypertext}"
}
@Proceedings{ECHT-92,
Title="Proceedings of the Fourth {ACM} Conference on Hypertext",
Editor="D.~Lucarella and J.~Nanard and M.~Nanard and P.~Paolini",
Month="30 " # nov # " -- 4 " # dec, Year=1992,
Address="Milano, Italy",
Organization="{ACM} {SIGLINK}, {SIGIR}, {SIGOIS}",
Publisher="{ACM Press}"
}
@Proceedings{ECHT-94,
Editor="Nuno Guimaraes",
Title="{ECHT '94}: European Conference on Hypermedia Technology",
Month="19 -- 23 " # sep, Year=1994,
Address="Edinburgh, Scotland",
Organization="{ACM SIGLINK}, {ACM SIGOIS}",
ISBN="0-89791-640-9"
}
@Proceedings{HT2,
Editor="Cath Green and Ray McAleese",
BookTitle="Hypertext: Theory into Practice {II}",
Title="Hypertext 2",
Address="University of York", Month="29 -- 30 " # jun # " 1989",
Publisher="INTELLECT Ltd.", Year=1990,
Comment="{NOT YET READ --- cited in Nielsen\cite[p.202]{Ni:Bib90}}"
}
@Proceedings{IR90,
Title="{SIGIR} '90 13th International Conference On Research
and Development in Information Retrieval",
Editor="Jean-Luc Vidick",
Publisher="The Association for Computing Machinery",
Organization="SIGIR",
Month="5 -- 7 " # sep, Year=1990,
CallNo="Z699.A1.I 56 1990"
}
@Proceedings{IR91,
Title="{SIGIR} '91 Proceedings of the 14th Annual International
{ACM/SIGIR} Conference on Research and Development in Information
Retrieval",
Editor="A.~Bookstein and Y.~Chiaramella and G.~Salton and V.~V.
Raghava",
Publisher="The Association for Computing Machinery",
Organization="{ACM SIGIR}",
Address="Chicago, Illinois USA",
Month="13 -- 16 " # oct, Year=1991,
HowPublished="SIGIR Forum"
}
@Proceedings{IR92,
Title="{SIGIR} '92 Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual
International {ACM SIGIR} Conference on Research and Development
in Information Retrieval",
Editor="Nicholas Belkin and Peter Ingwersen and Annelise Mark
Pejtersen",
Publisher="{ACM}",
Organization="{Royal School of Librarianship, Copenhagen,
Denmark}",
Address="Copenhagen, Denmark",
Month="21 -- 24 " # jun, Year=1992,
HowPublished="{SIGIR Forum} (2 July 1992)",
CallNo="Z699.A1A886 92-07-02"
}
@Proceedings{IR93,
Title="{SIGIR} '93 Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual
International {ACM SIGIR} Conference on Research and Development
in Information Retrieval",
Editor="Robert Korfhage and Edie Rasmussen and Peter Willett",
Publisher="{ACM}",
Organization="{SIGIR}",
Address="Pittsburgh, {PA}, {USA}",
Month="27 " # jun # " -- 1 " # jul, Year=1993,
HowPublished="{SIGIR Forum} (v.27 no.2)",
CallNo="Z699.A1A886 93-07-15"
}
@Proceedings{CHI89,
Editor="Ken Bice and Clayton Lewis",
Title ="{CHI} '89 `Wings For The Mind'",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley", Organization="{ACM SIGCHI}",
Address="Austin, Texas",
Month="30 " # apr # " -- 4 " # may, Year=1989,
CallNo="QA76.9.H85C44 1989", ISBN="0-201-50400-6"
}
@Proceedings{InterCHI93,
Title="Proceedings of {INTERCHI} 1993",
Editor="Stacey Ashlund and Kevin Mullet and Austin Henderson and
Erik Hollnagel and Ted White",
Publisher="Addison-Wesley", Month="24~-- 29 " # apr, Year=1993,
Organization="{ACM} {SIGCHI}, {IFIP} {TC}~13, {NGI}",
Address="Amsterdam, The Netherlands"
}
@Proceedings{CHI97,
Title="Looking to the Future Proceedings of the CHI 97 Conference on
Human Factors in Computing Systems",
Location="Atlanta, {GA}",
Year=1997, Month=22#"--"#27#" "#mar,
Editor="Steve Pemberton",
Publisher="{ACM} Press",
Address="New York, {NY}",
ISBN="0-89791-802-9"
}
@Proceedings{CHI98,
Title="Making the Impossible Possible: {CHI 98} Human Factors in
Computing Systems Conference Proceedings",
Month=18 # " -- " # 23 # "~" # apr, Year=1998,
Editor="Clare-Marie Karat and Arnold Lund and Jo{\"e}lle Coutaz and John
Karat",
Location="Los Angeles, {CA}",
Publisher="{ACM} Press",
Address="New York, {NY}",
ISBN="0-201-30987-4"
}
@Proceedings{CHI2K,
Title="{CHI} 2000 Conference Proceedings",
Month=1 # " -- " # 6 # "~" # apr, Year=2000,
Editor="Thea Turner and Gerd Szwillus and Mary Czerwinski and Fabio
Patern{\'o}",
Organization="{ACM} {SIGCHI}",
Location="The Hague, Netherlands",
Publisher="{ACM} Press",
Address="New York, {NY}",
ISBN="1-58113-216-6"
}
@Proceedings{CHI05
,Title="{CHI} '05: Proceedings of the {SIGCHI} conference on
Human factors in computing systems"
,Editor="Wendy Kellog and Shumin Zhai and Carolyn Cale and Gerritt
{van der Veer}"
,Location="Portland, {OR}"
,Publisher="{ACM} Press"
,Address="New York, {NY}"
,ISBN="1-58113-998-5"
,Month=2#" -- 7"#apr ,Year=2005
}
@Proceedings{HT89,
Title="Hypertext 89 Proceedings",
Editor="Norman Meyrowitz",
Publisher="Association for Computing Machinery",
Organization="{ACM}",
Month="5--8 " # nov, Year=1989,
Address="Pittsburgh, {PA}",
ISBN="0-89791-339-6", CallNo="QA76.9D6H91987",
From="U of Toronto/CSCI",
SeeAlso="R. Akscyn and F. Halasz's {\it Topics on
Hypertext}~\cite{Akscyn} (updated papers)"
}
@Proceedings{HT93,
Title="The Fifth {ACM} Conference on Hypertext Proceedings",
Year=1993,
Address="Seattle, Washington {USA}", Month="14 -- 18 " # nov,
Organization="{ACM} {SIGLINK}, {SIGIR}, {SIGOIS}",
Publisher="{ACM} Press",
Key="Hypertext 1993"
}
@Proceedings{HT96,
Title="Hypertext '96 The Seventh {ACM} Conference on Hypertext",
Year=1996,
Address="Washington, {DC}", Month="16 -- 20 " # mar,
Organization="{ACM} {SIGLINK}, {SIGOIS}",
Publisher="{ACM} Press",
ISBN="0-89791-778-2"
}
@Proceedings{HT98,
Title="Hypertext 98: Proceedings of the ninth {ACM} conference on
Hypertext and hypermedia: links, objects, time and space---structure in
hypermedia systems: links, objects, time and space---structure in
hypermedia systems",
Month="20--24~" # jun, Year=1998, Address="Pittsburgh, {PA}",
Editor="Kaj Gr{\o}nb{\ae}k and Elli Mylanos and
Shipman, III, Frank M.",
Organization="{ACM} {SIGLINK} and {ACM} {SIGIR}",
}
@Proceedings{HT99,
Title="Hypertext '99 Returning to Our Diverse Roots The
10th {ACM} Conference on Hypertext and Hypermedia",
Editor="Klaus Tochtermann and J{\"o}rg Westbomke and
Uffe K. Wiil and John J. Leggett",
Month=feb, Year=1999,
Publisher="{ACM} Press", Address="Darmstadt, Germany"
}
@Proceedings{HT2K,
Editor="Kenneth M. Anderson",
Title="Proceedings of the Eleventh {ACM} Conference on Hypertext
and Hypermedia",
Month="30 "# may # " -- " # "4 " # jun, Year=2000,
Address="{San} {Antonio}, {TX}",
Publisher="{ACM} Press"
}
@Proceedings{HT01
,Title = "{HYPERTEXT} '01: Proceedings of the twelfth {ACM} conference on
Hypertext and Hypermedia"
,Editor="Hugh Davis and Yellowlees Douglas and David G. Durand"
,Year = 2001
,Month = 14#" -- "#18 #" "#aug
,ISBN = "1-59113-420-7"
,Location = "Aarhus, Denmark"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York {NY}"
}
@Proceedings{HT03
,Title = "HYPERTEXT '03: Proceedings of the fourteenth {ACM} conference
on Hypertext and hypermedia"
,Key="Hypertext 2003"
,Year = 2003
,Month=26#" -- "#30#" "#aug
,ISBN = "1-58113-704-4"
,Location = "Nottingham, {UK}"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
}
@Proceedings{HT05
,Title = "HYPERTEXT '05: Proceedings of the sixteenth ACM conference on
Hypertext and hypermedia"
,Key="ACM Hypertext"
,Year = 2005
,ISBN = "1-59593-168-6"
,Location = "{Salzburg, Austria}"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
,Annote = {General chair: Siegfried Reich;
Program chair: Manolis Tzagarakis}
}
@Proceedings{HT06
,Key="ACM Hypertext"
,Title = "{HYPERTEXT} '06: Proceedings of the seventeenth conference on
Hypertext and hypermedia"
,Year = 2006
,ISBN = "1-59593-417-0"
,Location = "Odense, Denmark"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address = "New York, {NY}"
,Note="{General chair Uffe K. Wiil; Programe chairs Peter J. N{\"{u}}rnberg
and Jessica Rubart}"
}
@Proceedings{HT07
,Note = "General Chair-Simon Harper and Program Chairs Helen Ashman,
Mark Bernstein, Alexandra Cristea, Hugh C. Davis, Paul De Bra,
Vicki Hanson, and Dave Millard"
,Title = "{HT}\,'07: Proceedings of the 18th conference on Hypertext
and hypermedia"
,Year = 2007 ,Location = "Manchester, {UK}"
,ISBN = "978-1-59593-820-6"
,Publisher="{ACM} Press" ,Address = "New York,{NY}"
,Organization="{ACM} {sigWeb}"
}
@Proceedings{HT2010
,Note = "General Chair-Mark Chignell, and Program Chair-Elaine Toms"
,Title = {HT '10: Proceedings of the 21st ACM conference on Hypertext
and hypermedia}
,Year = 2010 ,Location = {Toronto, Ontario, Canada}
,ISBN = {978-1-4503-0041-4}
,Publisher="{ACM} Press" ,Address = "New York,{NY}"
,Organization="{ACM} {sigWeb}"
}
@Proceedings{St:SMM,
Editor="Susan Stone and Michael Buckland",
Title="Studies in Multimedia State-of-the-Art Solutions in
Multimedia and Hypertext",
Publisher="Learned Information, Inc.", Year=1992,
Organization=ASIS,
Month=apr,
Series="{ASIS} Monograph Series",
CallNo="Z 678.93.H94 S78 1992", ISBN="0-938734-59-1"
}
@Proceedings{BCS/ACM3,
Title="Research and Development in Information Retrieval",
Editor="C.~J. van Rijsbergen",
Address="King's College, Cambridge", Month="2 -- 6 " # jul,
Year=1984,
Series="British Computer Society Workshop",
Note="Proceedings of the third joint {BCS} and {ACM} symposium",
ISBN="0 521 26865 6", LCC="84-45234"
}
@Proceedings{AInHT,
Editor="Mark Berstein",
Title="{AAAI-88} Workshop {AI} and Hypertext: Issues and Directions",
Publisher="Eastgate Systems",
Address="134 Main St., Watertown, {MA} 02172, {USA}",
Organization="{AAAI}",
Year=1988
}
@Proceedings{HTStand,
Title="Proceedings of the Hypertext Standardization Workshop",
Month="16 -- 18 " # jan, Year=1990,
Editor="Judi Moline and Dan Benigni and Hean Baronas",
Publisher="{U.S.} Department of Commerce",
Organization="National Institute of Standards and Technology",
Address="Gaithersburg, {MD}",
Note="{NIST} Special Publication 500-178",
Comment="Obtained by ILL from the Royal Ontario Museum for \$10",
CallNo="QA76.76.H94 H96 1990"
}
@Proceedings{VLDB90,
Title="Proceddings of the $16^{\rm th}$ {VLDB} Conference",
Editor="Dennis McLeod and Ron Sacks-Davis and Hans Schek",
Month="13 -- 16 " # aug, Year=1990,
Address="Brisbane, Australia",
Publisher="Morgan Kaufmann",
CallNo="QA76.9.D3I559", ISBN="0-55860-149-X"
}
@Proceedings{WWWC1,
Title="Selected Papers of the First World-Wide Web Conference",
Editor="R.~Cailliau",
Organization="{CERN}",
Year=1994, Month="25 -- 27~" # may,
Note="Published in volume 27 no.~2 ("#nov#"~1994) of {Computer
Networks and {ISDN} Systems: The International Journal of
Computer and Telecommunications Networking}"
}
@Book{Jo:DHL,
Editor="David~H. Jonassen and Heinz Mandl",
Title="Designing Hypermedia for Learning",
Publisher="Springer-Verlag", Year=1990,
Series="{NATO} Advanced Science Institutes Series, {F}: Computer and
Systems Sciences, Vol.~67",
Organization="{NATO} Scientific Affairs Division",
Note="Updated proceedings of the {NATO} Advanced Research Workshop
on Designing Hypertext/Hypermedia for Learning, held in
Rottenburg/Neckar, {FRG}, 3 -- 8~July 1989. Includes typed hypertext
annotation links, made by the authors, connecting passages in papers
to each other."
}
@Proceedings{DL98,
Title="Proceedings of the Third {ACM} Conference on Digital Libraries",
Editor="Ian H. Witten and Robert M. Akscyn and Shipman, III, Frank M.",
Month="23 -- 26~" # jun, Year=1998,
Publisher="{ACM} Press",
Address="Pittsburgh, {PA}, {USA}"
}
@Proceedings{UI4ALL-95,
Title="Proceedings of the 1st {ERCIM} Workshop on 'User Interfaces
for All'",
Editor="Constantine Stephanidis",
Address="Heraklion, Crete, Greece",
Month="30 -- 31~"#oct, Year=1995,
URL="http://ui4all.ics.forth.gr/UI4ALL-95/proceedings.html",
Note="Downloaded 18~"#mar#" 2001"
}
@Proceedings{CogErg91,
Title="Cognitive Ergomics: Contributions from Experimental Psychology",
Editor="Gerrit C. {van der Veer} and Sebastiano Bagnara and Gerard
A. M. Kempen",
Year=1991,
Organization="European Association of Cognitive Ergonomics",
Note="Selected papers published in revised form in \emph{Acta
Psychologica} volume 78",
ISSN="001-6918",
SeeAlso="Citation for book version~\cite{vdV:CE14}"
}
@Proceedings{WBC05
,Title="{IADIS} International Conference on Web Based Communities"
,Year=2005 ,Month=feb
,Location="Algarve, Portugal"
,ISBN="9-729-93537-8"
,Editor="Piet Kommers and Pedro Isa{\'{\i}}as"
}
@Proceedings{CRIWG02
,Title = "{CRIWG} '02: Proceedings of the 8th International Workshop
on Groupware: Design, Implementation and Use"
,Editor="J{\"{o}}rg M. Haake and Jos{\'{e}} A. Pino"
,Location="La Serena, Chile"
,Month = "1 -- 4 "#sep ,Year = {2002}
,ISBN = "3-540-44112-3" ,ISSN = "0302-9743"
,Publisher = "Springer-Verlag"
,Address = "London, {UK}"
,Note="Published in Lecture Notes in Computer Science volume 2440/2002"
}
@TechReport{Sa:TermFind,
Author="G.~Salton and C.~S. Yang and C.~T. Yu",
Title="A Theory of Term Importance in Automatic Text Analysis",
Institution="Department of Computer Science, Cornell University",
Month=jul, Year=1974,
Type="{TR}", Number="74-208",
Keyword="\K{Classic}",
SeeAlso="Salton's 1989 book\cite{Salton89}"
}
@TechReport{Du:TreeDist,
Author="Nicholas Duncan and David T. Barnard",
Title="The Document-To-Document Correction Problem",
Institution="Department of Computing and Information Science,
Queen's University at Kingston",
Month=jul, Year=1991,
Type="{Technical Report}", Number="91-315",
ISSN="0836-0227"
}
@TechReport{Sh:FCHEETD,
Author="Shipman, {III}, Frank M. and Catherine C. Marshall",
Title="Formality Considered Harmful: Experiences, Emerging Themes, and
Directions",
Year="(no date)",
Institution="Xerox Palo Alto Research Center",
Pages=19,
Note="A revised version seems to have been published in
Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), v.8, n.4 (Fall 1999),
pp.~333 -- 352.",
SeeAlso="CSCW paper \url{http://bush.cs.tamu.edu/~shipman/}
and what might be the original in HTML
\url{http://bush.cs.tamu.edu/~shipman/formality-paper/harmful.html}",
Keyword="\K{HT!Spatial hypertext}"
}
@TechReport{MAESTRO-0,
Author="David T. Barnard and Ian A. Macleod",
Title="Maestro Working paper 0: An Archive of Structured
Texts",
Institution="Department of Computing and Information Science,
Queen's University at Kingston",
Month="14~" # nov, Year=1989,
Type="Technical Report", Number="86-262",
Keyword="\K{System!MAESTRO}"
}
@TechReport{Fahmy-TR,
Author="Eanass Fahmy and David T. Barnard",
Title="Adding Hypertext Links to an Archive of Documents",
Institution="Department of Computing and Information Science,
Queen's University at Kingston",
Month="14~" # dec, Year=1989,
Type="Technical Report", Number="86-265",
Keyword="\K{System!MAESTRO}"
}
@TechReport{MacC:QHier,
Author="Ian A. Macleod",
Title="A Query Language for Retrieving Information From
Hierarchic Text Structures",
Institution="Department of Computing and Information Science,
Queen's University at Kingston",
Year=1989,
Type="Technical Report", Number="86-263",
Keyword="\K{System!MAESTRO}"
}
@TechReport{Ra:Markup,
Author="Darrell R. Raymond and Frank Wm. Tompa and Derick Wood",
Title="Markup Reconsidered",
Institution="Computer Science Department, University of Western
Ontario, London, Canada",
Month="1~" # may, Year=1993,
Type="TR", Number="356"
}
@TechReport{Corn:89-993,
Author="G.~Salton and C.~Buckley",
Title="On the Automatic Generation of Content Links in Hypertext",
Institution="Department of Computer Science, Cornell University",
Month=apr, Year=1989,
Type="TR", Number="89-993"
}
@TechReport{Corn:92-1300,
Author="Gerard Salton and J.~Allan and C.~Buckley",
Title="Selective Use of Full-Text Databases",
Institution="Department of Computer Science, Cornell University",
Month=aug, Year=1992,
Type="TR", Number="92-1300"
}
%% Unpublished
@Unpublished{FACILSI,
Author="Thomas K. Landauer and Michael L. Littman",
Title="Fully Automatic Cross-Language Document Retrieval Using
Latent Semantic Indexing",
Note="Bellcore Communications, Morristown, NJ",
Keyword="\K{LSI}"
}
%% RFC
@TechReport{RFC1036,
Author="M. Horton and R. Adams",
Title="Standard for Interchange of {USENET} Messages",
Month=dec, Year=1987,
Type="Request for Comments", Number="1036",
Note="Obsoletes {RFC} 850 \cite{RFC850}",
Institution="Internet Engineering Task Force"
}
@TechReport{RFC850,
Author="Mark R. Horton",
Title="Standard for Interchange of {USENET} Messages",
Month=jun, Year=1983,
Type="Request for Comments", Number="850",
Note="Updated by {RFC} 1036 \cite{RFC1036}",
Institution="Internet Engineering Task Force"
}
@TechReport{Zh:NSMID,
Author="Andrew T. Zhou and James Blustein and Nur Zincir-Heywood",
Title="The State of Network Security Management: Issues and Directions",
Year=2003, Month=20#" "#may,
Type="Technical Report", Number="CS-2003-06",
Institution="Dalhousie University Faculty of Computer Science",
URL="http://www.cs.dal.ca/research/techreports/2003/CS-2003-06.shtml",
}
@TechReport{RFC1866,
Author="T.~Berners-Lee and D.~Connolly",
Title="Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0",
Month=nov, Year=1995,
Type="Request for Comments", Number=1866,
Institution="Network Working Group, Internet Engineering Task Force",
URL="ftp://ftp.internic.net/rfc/rfc1866.txt"
}
@Misc{McGH:Ebooks,
Title="Student success and the use of new technology in education",
Key="McGraw-Hill",
ISBN="0-07-089162-1",
URL="http://www.mcgrawhill.ca/highereducation/images/student_success.pdf",
Year=2000, Month=jan,
Publisher="McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limted",
Address="300 Water Street, Whitby, Ontario, {L1N~9B6}",
pages=18,
SeeAlso="summary of results by R.~Owston~\cite{Ow:SSUNTE}",
Annote="pp.12--14: what people think they need \& what sells
e-textbooks",
}
@Misc{Ow:SSUNTE,
Author="Ron Owston",
Title="Student Success \& the Use of New Technology in Education
Phase~2 -~Highlights~-",
URL="http://www.mcgrawhill.ca/highereducation/images/studentsuccess2000summary.pdf",
SeeAlso="McGraw-Hill study~\cite{McGH:Ebooks}",
Note="summary of Technology and Student Success: A McGraw-Hill Ryerson
Survey of Higher Education Teachers in Canada",
pages=29,
}
@techreport{hook96,
author = {H{\"{o}}{\"{o}}k, Kristina and D{\"{a}}hlback, Nils and Sj{\"{o}}linder, Marie},
title= {Individual differences and navigation in hypermedia},
institution="Swedish Institute of Computer Science {SICS}",
type = "Research Report",
number= {R96-01},
year = 1996,
url="\url{ftp://ftp.sics.se/pub/SICS-reports/Reports/SICS-R--96-01--SE.ps.Z}",
Keyword="\K{spatial ability!Jason Satel}"
}
@techreport{Lu:GDOQ
,Title="Guidelines for the Design of Online-Questionnaires"
,Author="J. Lumsden"
,Pages=31
,Year=2005 ,Month="09 "#jun
,Institution="National Research Council (of Canada)"
,Number="NRC 48231"
,HowPublished=
"\url{http://iit-iti.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/publications/nrc-48231_e.html}"
,Annote="Abstract:\begin{quotation}
As a new medium for questionnaire delivery, the internet has the
potential to revolutionise the survey process. Online (web-based)
questionnaires provide several advantages over traditional survey
methods in terms of cost, speed, appearance, flexibility,
functionality, and usability (Bandilla et al., 2003; Dillman, 2000;
Kwak and Radler, 2002). Online-questionnaires can also provide many
capabilities not found in traditional paper-based questionnaires:
they can include pop-up instructions and error messages; they can
incorporate links; and it is possible to encode difficult skip
patterns making such patterns virtually invisible to
respondents. Despite this, and the introduction of numerous tools
to support online-questionnaire creation, current electronic survey
design typically replicates that of paper-based questionnaires,
failing to harness the full power of the electronic delivery
medium. Worse, a recent environmental scan of online-questionnaire
design tools found that little, if any, support is incorporated
within these tools to guide questionnaire designers according to
best-practice (Lumsden and Morgan, 2005). This article introduces a
comprehensive set of guidelines --- a practical reference guide ---
for the design of online-questionnaires.\end{quotation}"
}
@TechReport{Up:W-a-G
,Author="Rena Upitis and Richard Dearden and Kori Inkpen and
Joan Lawry, Maria Klawe and Kelly Davidson and David Hsu and
Nicholas Thorne and Kamran Sedighian and Rob Sharein and
Ann Anderson"
,Title="Weird-a-gons and Other Folded Objects: The Influence of
Computer Animation, Paper Models, and Cooperative Mediation on
Spatial Understanding"
,Institution="University of British Columbia"
,Number="{TR-94-30}" ,Year=1994
,URL="https://www.cs.ubc.ca/nest/egems/reports/3dpaper.ps"
}
@TechReport{STG:AnnTax
,Author="Renear, Allen H. and DeRose, Steve J. and Mylonas, Elli and
{van Dam}, Andries"
,Title="An Outline for a Functional Taxonomy of Annotation"
,Institution="Brown University Scholarly Technology Group"
,Month=mar ,Year=1999
,Type="{STG} Technical Note"
,URL="http://hdl.handle.net/2142/9098"
,Keyword = "\K{Annotation}"
}
@InCollection{Qu:SemMem,
Author="M. Ross Quillian",
BookTitle="Semantic Information Processing",
Title="{Semantic Memory}", Pages="216 -- 270",
Editor="Marvin Minsky",
Publisher=MITp, Year=1968,
Keyword="\K{Classic}"
}
@MastersThesis{La:Toyanne,
Title="Concurrency Control in Hypertext Databases",
Author="Toyanne M. Lauriston",
School="University of Western Ontario",
Address="London, Ontario, Canada",
Year=1990,
CallNo="AS42.L8 L3669", ISBN="0771411235",
Keyword="\K{General} $\bullet$ \K{Definition}",
Annote="Has a good introduction to HT",
}
@MastersThesis{Ta:SW
,Title="A scholar's workstation"
,Author="Kathleen F. Taylor"
,School="University of Western Ontario"
,Address="London, Ontario, Canada"
,Year=1989
,CallNo="AS42.L8 T24333 1989"
}
@MastersThesis{Ga:SHAW
,Title="Support of Hypertextual Annotation on the {Web}"
,Author="Huan Gao"
,School="Dalhousie University"
,Address="Halifax, {NS}, Canada"
,Year=2004 ,Month=jan
,Note="Published as a technical report at
\url{https://www.cs.dal.ca/research/techreports/cs-2004-20/}"
,Annote="Relied on MVD (Multivalent Document Model) \cite{Ph:MvA}"
,Keyword="\K{System!Multivalent Document} $\bullet$ \K{interface}
$\bullet$ \K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW}"
}
@MastersThesis{Bl:MSc,
Title="An Evaluation of Tools for Converting Text to Hypertext",
Author="William James Blustein",
School="University of Western Ontario",
Address="London, Ontario, Canada",
Year=1994,
SeeAlso="LSI\cite{Ba:LSIis}, Jones and Furnas \cite{Jo:GeoSim},
TOPIC\cite{Ha:AutoGen}, VISAR\cite{Cl:VISAR}, Bernstein's
apprentice\cite{Be:App}",
Annote="Converted Usenet messages into hypertext using structural and
semantic rules, and evaluated quality of semantically built links.
Those links were evaluated by comparing the minimal number of links
between their coresponding nodes in an analagous hypertext graph with
a measure of semantic similarity derived from latent semantic
indexing."
}
@PhDThesis{Bl:PhD,
Title="Hypertext Versions of Journal Articles: Computer-aided Linking
and Realistic Human-based Evaluation",
Author="William James Blustein",
School="University of Western Ontario",
Address="London, Ontario, Canada",
Year=1999,
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Piolat et al.~\cite{Pi:ESPTRV} for interface design
\item C.C.Marshall's \emph{Reading and Writing the Electronic Book}
\cite[\S7.1.2 (pp.\,152--157)]{Ma:RWeB} especially
pp.\,152--153 for other studies of how people read folling
annotation
\end{itemize}"
}
@MastersThesis{Fa:ForestLinks,
Author="Eanass Fahmy",
Title="Programmatically Generating Connections in Document Forests",
School="Queen's University",
Address="Kingston, Ontario, Canada",
Year=1988,
Note="Department of Computing and Information Science"
}
@PhDThesis{Gr:SGreen.PhD,
Author="Stephen J. Green",
Title="Automatically generating hypertext by computing semantic
similarity",
Year=1997,
School="University of Toronto",
Address="Toronto, Ontario, Canada",
Keyword="\K{System!WordNet} $\bullet$ \K{lexical chaining} $\bullet$
\K{AutoGen}"
}
@Book{Ol:JOPhD,
Author="Jan Olsen",
Title="Electronic Journal Literature: Implications for Scholars",
Publisher="Mecklermedia",
Year=1994,
ISBN="0-88736-925-1"
}
@PhDThesis{Ba:LisaBaron,
Author="Lisa Baron",
Title="The Effectiveness of Labelled, Typed Links as Cues in Hypertext
Systems",
Year=1994,
School="University of Western Ontario",
Address="London, Ontario, Canada",
CallNo="AS42.L83B2656 1994", ISBN="0315905689 (microfilm)"
}
@PhDThesis{To:ETomsPhD,
Author="Elaine G. Toms",
Title="Browsing digital information: examining the 'affordances' in the
interaction of user and text",
Year=1997,
School="University of Western Ontario",
Address="London, Ontario, Canada",
SeeAlso="IJHCS 2K article~\cite{To:UFBET}"
}
@PhDThesis{Li,
Author="Zhuoxon Li",
Title="Information Retrieval for Automatic Link Creation in
Hypertext Systems",
Year=1993,
School="Southampton University",
Keyword="\K{System!Microcosm} $\bullet$ \K{phrase} $\bullet$
\K{link types!taxonomy of}"
}
@PhDThesis{Be:MLBernard,
Author="Michael Lewis Bernard",
Title=" Examining a Metric for Predicting the Accessibility of
Information within Hypertext Structures",
School="Wichita State University",
Year=2002,
URL="http://psychology.wichita.edu/mbernard/abstract.htm",
Annote="\begin{itemize}
\item symmetrical hierarchies (no cycles).
\item design based on menu studies.
\item measure based on Shannon's information.
\end{itemize}",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item Botafogo's measures~\cite{Bo:HTMetrics},
\item Jean's book~\cite{Jean'sBook},
\item Browsing chapter in ARIST 1993~\cite{Ch:Browsing}
\item Evaluation of information-seeking performance in
hypermedia digital libraries by Salampasis et
al.~\cite{Sa:EISPHM}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{menus}"
}
@MastersThesis{ATZ:IDSHCI
,Title="Improving intrusion detection systems through an {HCI} approach"
,Author="Andrew Ting Zhou"
,Year=2005
,School="Dalhousie University Faculty of Computer Science"
,SeeAlso="Kuo et al.'s `Designing an evaluation method for security user
interface' in interactions 13(3):28--31 \cite{Ku:DEMSUI}"
}
@PhDthesis{Ju:DCMNW
,Author= "Ion Juvina"
,Title= "Development of a Cognitive Model for Navigating on the Web"
,School="Utrecht University" ,year=2006
,URL= "http://igitur-archive.library.uu.nl/dissertations/2006-1025-201007/index.htm"
,Annote="Abstract:
\begin{quotation}
The objective of this thesis is to build a cognitive model
of human performance in Web-assisted tasks. The research is
driven by the following questions: What are the most important
factors in determining success in Web-assisted tasks? What
cognitive mechanisms are involved in these factors? What kind
of Web navigation support can be conceived based on the
knowledge gained from the previous questions?
\\\hspace*{\parindent}
The approach is based on the simultaneous consideration of
theory, method and real-world applicability. Web navigation is
grounded in theories of Cognitive Science (Text Comprehension
in particular), and Information Science (Human-Computer
Interaction in particular). Experimentation, statistical
analysis and modeling are conducted. Practical needs of Web
engineering are taken into consideration.
\\\hspace*{\parindent}
This research investigates how real Web applications are
used. A sequence of repeated studies shows that a combination
of two factors is the most important determinant of human
performance in Web-assisted tasks: a structure-related factor
(spatial ability) and a content-related factor (domain
expertise). Spatial cognition is involved in representing the
structure of the information space, while domain knowledge is
necessary for understanding and selecting relevant content.
\\\hspace*{\parindent}
Factors, such as spatial ability and domain expertise, can
only be measured with specialized tests, which cannot be
implemented in realistic Web applications. For this reason,
Web-logging data is used to calculate metrics of Web
navigation behavior. Metrics referring to the structure of
user navigation are called syntactic, whereas metrics
referring to the visited content are called
\emph{semantic}. It is demonstrated that \emph{syntactic}
(structural) metrics indicate users' navigation styles, for
example, if they prefer to revisit pages rather than viewing
new pages, or if they return to previously viewed pages using
the back button or just by following links. Semantic metrics
indicate if users are effective in pursuing their goals
independent of their navigation styles. These navigation
metrics can be used in building user-models for adaptive Web
applications such as recommender systems.
\\\hspace*{\parindent}
A cognitive model of Web navigation (labeled CoLiDeS+) is
proposed. Theoretical and empirical arguments are used to
motivate the main assumptions of the model which are:
(a)~users build and update a mental representation of the
information space being navigated; and (b)~they assess
relevance and make decisions to select particular contents
based on both prior knowledge they have about those contents,
and knowledge they gain from the local context of those
particular contents (i.e., what contents they link
to). CoLiDeS+, an augmented version of CoLiDeS (Kitajima,
Blackmon, \& Polson, 2000), uses Latent Semantic Analysis to
model assessments of relevance and user navigation history
(sequence of selected links) to model contextual information
involved in making navigational decisions. This latter
feature is the main distinguishing characteristic of
CoLiDeS+. The model has been empirically tested for its
accuracy in simulating actual user behavior and its utility
in generating Web navigation support. It is shown that
CoLiDeS+ performs better in modeling user behavior than its
previous version (CoLiDeS) and the navigation support
generated from its simulations has a positive impact on user
behavior and task outcomes. This thesis advances the
scientific understanding of human performance in
knowledge-intensive tasks and contributes to designing
useable and accessible information environments.
\end{quotation}
Keywords:
\begin{quotation}
Web navigation, human performance, cognitive modeling, spatial
ability, domain expertise, Web useability, Web accessibility,
navigation metrics, navigation support, user modeling
\end{quotation}"
,SeeAlso="article in IJHCS \cite{vanO:Juvina}"
,Keyword="\K{HCI!CS6606} $\bullet$ \K{Navigation!Lostness} $\bullet$
\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{spatial ability} $\bullet$
\K{HT!System!WWW} $\bullet$ \K{CoLiDeS}"
}
@InProceedings{Bl:PGWht
,Author = "James Blustein and Mona Noor"
,Title = "Personal glossaries on the {WWW}: An exploratory study
{(Hypertext)}"
,BookTitle = "{DocEng} '04: Proc. of the 2004 {ACM} symposium on
Document engineering"
,Year = 2004
,ISBN = "1-58113-938-1"
,Location = "Milwaukee, {WI}"
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1030397.1030409"
}
@InProceedings{Sc:DLIA,
Author="Bill N. Schilit and Morgan N. Price and Gene Golovchinsky",
Title="Digital Library Information Appliances",
BookTitle=DL98, CROSSREF="DL98",
Keyword="\K{System!XLibris} $\bullet$ \K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:AnnBP2DL,
Author="Catherine C. Marshall",
Title="Annotation: from paper books to the digital library",
BookTitle=DL98, CROSSREF="DL98",
Pages=131 # " -- " # 140,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/263690.263806",
Keyword="\K{annotation}",
SeeAlso="HT98 follow-up~\cite{Ma:EcoAnn}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:EcoAnn,
Author="Catherine C. Marshall",
Title="Toward an ecology of hypertext annotation",
BookTitle=HT98, CROSSREF="HT98",
Pages=40 # " -- " # 49,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/276627.276632",
Keyword="\K{annotation}",
SeeAlso="follows-up DL98 paper~\cite{Ma:AnnBP2DL}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:XLRG,
Title="Introducing a digital library reading appliance into a reading
group",
Author="Catherine C. Marshall and Morgan N. Price and Gene Golovchinsky
and Bill N. Schilit",
BookTitle="Proc. of the fourth ACM conference on Digital
libraries",
Year=1999, Pages=77 # " -- " # 83,
Address="Berkeley, California, {USA}",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/313238.313262",
Keyword="\K{System!XLibris} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@Article{Ma:DLM,
Author="Catherine C. Marshall and Gene Golovchinsky and Morgan
N. Price",
Title="Digital Libraries and Mobility",
Journal=cacm, Volume=44, Number=5, Month=may, Year=2001,
URL="http://www.acm.org/pubs/citations/journals/cacm/2001-44-5/p55-marshall/",
Pages=55#" -- "#56,
SeeAlso="Embodied User Interfaces for Really Direct
Manipulation~\cite{Fi:EUI}"
}
@Article{Di:RPS,
Author="Andrew Dillon",
Title="Reading from paper versus screens: a critical review of the
empirical literature",
Journal="Ergonomics", Volume=35, Number=10, Pages=1297#" -- "#1326,
Year=1992,
Annote="Considers differences in terms of outcome and processes.
Concludes that single variable explanations are insufficent.",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item O'Hara \& Sellen in CHI97~\cite{OH:CRPOLD}
\item Muter in Oostendorp and de~Mul(1996)~\cite{Mu:IDORCT}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@InCollection{Mu:IDORCT,
Author="Paul Muter",
Title="Interface Design and Optimization of Reading of Continous Text",
BookTitle="Cognitive Aspects of Electronic Text Processing",
CROSSREF="Oo:CAETP",
URL="http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/~muter/pmuter1.htm",
SeeAlso="\begin{itemize}
\item O'Hara \& Sellen in CHI97~\cite{OH:CRPOLD}
\item Dillon in Ergonomics 35(10)~\cite{Di:RPS}
\end{itemize}",
Keyword="\K{CogPsych} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@Article{Tr:AVPUID,
Author="David S. Travis",
Title="Applying visual psychophysics to user interface design",
Journal="Behaviour \& Information Technology", Volume=9, Number=5,
Pages=425 # " -- " # 438,
Year=1990,
SeeAlso="Dillon's 1992 survey of reading from computer
screens~\cite{Di:RPS} and Travis's book~\cite{Tr:ECD}",
}
@InProceedings{OH:CRPOLD,
Author="Kenton O'Hara and Abigail Sellen",
Title="A Comparison of Reading Paper and On-Line Documents",
BookTitle=SIGCHI97, CROSSREF="CHI97",
Pages=335 # " -- " # 342,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/258549.258787",
Publisher="{ACM} Press", Address="New York, {NY}",
Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{Reading} $\bullet$
\K{spatial ability}",
SeeAlso="O'Hara et al. in CHI'98~\cite{OH:SRULD}"
}
@InProceedings{OH:SRULD,
Author="Kenton O'Hara and Fiona Smith and William Newman and Abigail
Sellen",
Title="Student Readers' Use of Library Documents: Implications for
Library Technologies",
BookTitle=SIGCHI98, CROSSREF="CHI98",
Pages=233 # " -- " # 240,
SeeAlso="O'Hara and Sellen in CHI'97~\cite{OH:CRPOLD}",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/274644.274678",
Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@Article{Ov:AT,
Title="Annotation Technology",
Author="Ilia A. Ovsiannikov and Michael A. Arbib and Thomas H. McNeill",
Journal=ijhcs, Year=1999, Volume=50, Number=4, Pages=329 # " -- " # 362,
Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW} $\bullet$ \K{Review}",
Annote="Largely about their system (for the WWW) but a review of work by
others too. Supported in part by FX/PAL. See also their webpages."
}
@Article{Ra:DWAT
,Author = "Pei-Luen Patrick Rau and Sho-Hsen Chen and Yun-Ting Chin"
,Title = "Developing Web annotation tools for learners and instructors"
,Journal = "Interacting with Computers" ,Year=2004
,volume=16 ,number=2 ,Pages = 163#" -- "#181
,DOI="DOI: 10.1016/j.intcom.2003.10.001"
,URL = "http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6V0D-4BRSJTK-1/2/ddefbc9a949251b89433b53e52e0364f"
,Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:ERPP
,Title="Exploring the relationship between personal and public
annotations"
,Author="Catherine C. Marshall and A. J. Bernheim Brush"
,BookTitle="Proc. of the 2004 joint {ACM}/{IEEE} conference on
Digital libraries"
,Year=2004 ,Month="07--11 "#jun ,Address="Tucson, {AZ}, {USA}"
,Pages=349#"--"#357
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/996350.996432"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{La:Weasel,
Title="The Knowledge Weasel Hypermedia Annotation System",
Author="Daryl T. Lawton and Ian E. Smith",
BookTitle=HT93, CROSSREF="HT93",
Keyword="\K{System!Knowledge Weasel} $\bullet$ \K{collaboration}
$\bullet$ \K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{OH:SRULD,
Author="Kenton O'Hara and Fiona Smith and William Newman and Abigail
Sellen",
Title="Student Readers' Use of Library Documents: Implications for
Library Technologies",
BookTitle=SIGCHI98, CROSSREF="CHI98",
Pages=233 # " -- " # 240,
SeeAlso="O'Hara and Sellen in CHI'97~\cite{OH:CRPOLD}",
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/274644.274678",
Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{Reading}"
}
@InProceedings{Pr:LbI,
Author="Morgan N. Price and Gene Golovchinsky and Bill N. Schilit",
Title="Linking By Inking: Trailblazing in a Paper-like Hypertext",
BookTitle=HT98, CROSSREF="HT98",
Pages=30#" -- "#39,
Keyword="\K{System!XLibris} $\bullet$ \K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Sc:DLIA,
Author="Bill N. Schilit and Morgan N. Price and Gene Golovchinsky",
Title="Digital Library Information Appliances",
BookTitle=DL98, CROSSREF="DL98",
Keyword="\K{System!XLibris} $\bullet$ \K{annotation}"
}
@Article{Ca:FNIS,
Title="Facilitating navigation in information spaces: Road-signs on the
{World Wide Web}",
Author="Christopher S. Campbell and Paul Maglio",
Journal=ijhcs, Year=1999, Volume=50, Pages=309 # " -- " # 327,
Comment="abstract only",
Keyword="\K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW}",
Annote="From the abstract: `A series of experiments were conducted to
evaluate whether simple hyperlink annotations --- traffic lights that
represent Internet connection speeds --- can facilitate web
navigation. Traffic lights are small red, yellow or green images
added around the anchor text of each link indicating its connection
speed, red for for slow, yellow for somewhat fast and green for
fastest. The first two experiments showed that traffic lights do not
facilitate perceptual processes involved in web navigation (i.e. link
localization and visual search). However, traffic lights also
\emph{do not distract from the process of finding links in hypertext
documents and, thus have no perceptual performance cost}. The third
experiment showed that \emph{traffic lights facilitate web navigation
performance by improving link evaluation and decision processes. This
improvement is particularly marked when link relevance is low or
undifferentiated}. It was concluded that supplying users with
information about Internet connection speeds improves web navigation
performance. Thus, traffic lights provide functional cues for
efficiently navigating the web.' (emphasis added)",
SeeAlso="\cite{Ma:TDPI,Wr:CCLA}"
}
@InProceedings{Ro:IDSW3A,
Author="Martin R{\"o}scheisen and Christina Mogensen and Terry Winograd",
Title="Interaction Design for Shared World-Wide Web Annotations",
BookTitle="{CHI} '95 Proceedings", Year=1995
}
@Article{Li:IPRM,
Author="Ziming Liu and David G. Stork",
Title="Is Paperless Really More? Rethinking the role of paper in the
digital age",
Journal=cacm, Volume=43, Number=11, Month=nov, Year=2000,
URL="http://www.acm.org/pubs/citations/journals/cacm/2000-43-11/p94-liu/",
Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Ma:SCPS,
Author="Hannes Marais and Krishna Bharat",
Title="Supporting Cooperative and Personal Surfing with a Desktop
Assistant",
BookTitle="Proc. of the 10th annual ACM symposium on User
interface software and technology",
Year=1997, Pages=129 #" -- "# 138,
Address="Banff, Alberta, Canada",
Annote="(1)~shared annotations,
(2)~annotations not tied to location in a document (because they
found shared annotations don't work this way),
(3)~searching aid, on-the-fly full-text indexing",
Keyword="\K{System!Browserware} $\bullet$ \K{annotation} $\bullet$
\K{System!Vistabar/Webmark} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW} $\bullet$
\K{System!Alta Vista} $\bullet$ \K{Bloom Filters}"
}
@InProceedings{Ph:MvA,
Author="Thomas A. Phelps and Robert Wilensky",
Title="Multivalent Annotations",
BookTitle="Proc. of the First European Conference on Research and
Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries",
Date="1 -- 3~"#sept, Year=1997, Address="Pisa, Italy",
URL="http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~phelps/papers/mvd-edl97.ps.gz",
Keyword="\K{System!Multivalent Document} $\bullet$ \K{interface}
$\bullet$ \K{annotation}",
}
@Article{Fi:EUI,
Author="Kenneth P. Fishkin and Anuj Gujar and Beverly L. Harrison and
Thomas P. Moran and Roy Want",
Title="Embodied User Interfaces for \emph{Really} Direct Manipulation",
Journal=cacm, Volume=43, Number=9, Month=sep, Year=2000,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/348941.348998",
Keyword="\K{HCI} $\bullet$ \K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Wo:EASRW
,Author = "Joanna L. Wolfe"
,Title = "Effects of annotations on student readers and writers"
,BookTitle = "Proc. of the fifth {ACM} conference on Digital
libraries"
,Year = 2000
,ISBN = "1-58113-231-X"
,Pages = 19#" -- "#26
,Location = "San Antonio, {TX}"
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/336597.336620"
,Publisher = "{ACM} Press"
,Address="New York, {NY}"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Ob:SAS
,Author="Hartmut Obendorf"
,Title="Simplifying annotation support for real-world-settings: A
comparative study of active reading"
,BookTitle = "HYPERTEXT '03: Proc. of the fourteenth {ACM}
conference on Hypertext and hypermedia"
,Year=2003 ,CROSSREF="HT03"
,Pages=120#" -- "#121
,URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/900051.900076"
,Keywords="\K{annotation}"
}
@Article{Br:PMDSS
,Author="John Douglas Bradley"
,Title="Pliny: {A} model for digital support of scholarship"
,Journal=JoDI ,Volume=9 ,Number=1 ,Year=2008
,HowPublished="\url{http://journals.tdl.org/jodi/article/view/209}"
,SeeAlso="Jan Olsen's PhD book \cite{Ol:JOPhD} and Taylor's MSc
\cite{Ta:SW}"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@Article{Gs:ESEIR
,Author = "Theresia Gschwandtner and Katharina Kaiser and Patrick
Martini and Silvia Miksch"
,Title = "Easing semantically enriched information retrieval---An
interactive semi-automatic annotation system for medical documents"
,Journal=ijhcs ,volume=68 ,number=6 ,year=2010 ,month=jun
,Pages = 370#" -- "#385
,URL = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2009.08.002"
,note = "Human-Computer Interaction for Medicine and Health care
(HCI4MED): Towards making Information usable"
,Abstract = " Mapping medical concepts from a terminology system to
the concepts in the narrative text of a medical document is
necessary to provide semantically accurate information for
further processing steps. The MetaMap Transfer (MMTx) program is
a semantic annotation system that generates a rough mapping of
concepts from the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS)
Metathesaurus to free medical text, but this mapping still
contains erroneous and ambiguous bits of information. Since
manually correcting the mapping is an extremely cumbersome and
time-consuming task, we have developed the MapFace editor.
\newline
The editor provides a convenient way of navigating the
annotated information gained from information on both a
conceptual and a syntactical level, and thus it greatly
facilitates the handling of the MMTx program. Additionally, the
editor provides enhanced visualization features to support the
correct interpretation of medical concepts within the text. We
paid special attention to ensure that the MapFace editor is an
intuitive and convenient tool to work with. Therefore, we
recently conducted a usability study in order to create a well
founded background serving as a starting point for further
improvement of the editor's usability."
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@inproceedings{Pr:THRCM
,author = "Aristidis Protopsaltis and Vassiliki Bouki"
,title = "Towards a hypertext reading/comprehension model"
,booktitle = "Proc. of the 23rd annual international conference
on Design of communication: documenting \& designing for pervasive
information"
,series = {SIGDOC '05}
,year = 2005
,location = "Coventry, {UK}"
,pages = 159#"--"#166
,url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1085313.1085349}
,doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1085313.1085349}
,publisher = {ACM}
,address = {New York, NY, USA}
}
@Article{Pi:CEDNT
,Author="Annie Piolat and Thierry Olive and Ronald T. Kellogg"
,Title="Cognitive Effort during Note Taking"
,Journal="Applied Cognitive Psychology"
,Volume=19 ,Pages=291#"--"#312, Year=2005
,DOI="10.1002/acp.1086"
}
@Article{Qa:AMME
,Author = "Asim Qayyum"
,Title = "Analysing Markings Made on E-Documents"
,Journal = {Canadian J. of Information \& Library Sciences}
,ISSN ="1195096X"
,Year=2008 ,Volume=32 ,Number="1/2" ,Pages=35#"--"#53
,Abstract = "\begin{quotation}This exploratory study examines the
patterns of university students' textual markings made when
interacting with electronic documents. During active reading,
students read research articles for self-learning and instruction
in their individual study areas. E-documents were examined to
determine the kinds of information marked by the students, as
well as the document-marking approaches. Descriptive and
inferential statistical tests were used to analyse the data and
to determine the differences between marking patterns. The
results provide a very favourable set of user-interaction
taxonomies and research directions on which we intend to build a
future human-document interaction (HDI) research platform. The
results of this study also provide guidelines that digital
library system developers may adapt to build better
reading/marking applications.\end{quotation}"
}
@Article{Ma:HFRHI
,Title="Hypertext fiction reading: haptics and immersion"
,Author="Anne Mangen"
,Journal="J. of Research in Reading" ,ISSN="0141-0423"
,Volume=31, Issue=4,Year=2008, Pages=404#"--"#419
,DOI="10.1111/j.1467-9817.2008.00380.x"
}
@article{Ag:FMADC
,author = "Maristella Agosti and Nicola Ferro"
,title = "A formal model of annotations of digital content"
,journal =TOIS ,volume=26 ,issue=1 ,month=nov ,year=2007
,articleno = {3}
,url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1292591.1292594}
,doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1292591.1292594}
,publisher = {ACM}
,address = {New York, NY, USA}
}
@InCollection {Ag:ADLC
,Author = "Maristella Agosti and Nicola Ferro and Ingo Frommholz and
Ulrich Thiel"
,Title = "Annotations in Digital Libraries and Collaboratories --- Facets,
Models and Usage"
,BookTitle = "Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries"
,Series = LNCS ,Volume = 3232 ,Year =2004 ,Pages = 244#" -- "#255
,Editor = "Rachel Heery and Liz Lyon"
,Publisher = "Springer Berlin / Heidelberg"
,URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-30230-8_23}
,Abstract = "This paper presents the results of our study regarding the
different facets and ways of using annotations in both digital
libraries and collaboratories. This study represents an innovative
attempt at gathering methodological tools and synergies from both
fields in order to effectively define a comprehensive model for
annotations. Thus we propose a conceptual model for annotations in
order to develop an annotation service that can be plugged into
digital libraries and collaboratories. Finally, starting from our
model, we introduce a search strategy for exploiting annotations in
order to search and retrieve relevant documents for a user query."
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Hs:VALA
,Author = "I-Han Hsiao and Peter Brusilovsky and Michael Yudelson and
Alvaro Ortigosa"
,Title = "The value of adaptive link annotation in e-learning: a
study of a portal-based approach"
,BookTitle = "{HT} '10: Proc. of the 21st {ACM} conference on
Hypertext and hypermedia"
,Year = 2010
,Pages = 223#" -- "#228
,URL = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1810617.1810657}
}
@Book{Ja:Marg
,Author="H. J. Jackson"
,Title="Marginalia: Reader's Writing in Books"
,Publisher="Yale University Press"
,Year=2001
,LCC="Z1003.J12 2001"
,ISBN="0-300-08816-7"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@Book{Sa:TDC
,Author="John Ralston Saul"
,Title="The Doubter's Companion: A Dictionary of Aggressive Common
Sense"
,Publisher="Penguin Books"
,Year=1995
,LCC="PE1680.S38 1995"
,ISBN="0-14-023707-0"
,Keyword="\K{annotation!glossary}"
}
@Book{Jo:DHL,
Editor="David~H. Jonassen and Heinz Mandl",
Title="Designing Hypermedia for Learning",
Publisher="Springer-Verlag", Year=1990,
Series="{NATO} Advanced Science Institutes Series, {F}: Computer and
Systems Sciences, Vol.~67",
Organization="{NATO} Scientific Affairs Division",
Note="Updated proceedings of the {NATO} Advanced Research Workshop
on Designing Hypertext/Hypermedia for Learning, held in
Rottenburg/Neckar, {FRG}, 3 -- 8~July 1989. Includes typed hypertext
annotation links, made by the authors, connecting passages in papers
to each other."
}
@MastersThesis{Ga:SHAW
,Title="Support of Hypertextual Annotation on the {Web}"
,Author="Huan Gao"
,School="Dalhousie University"
,Address="Halifax, {NS}, Canada"
,Year=2004 ,Month=jan
,Note="Published as a technical report at
\url{https://www.cs.dal.ca/research/techreports/cs-2004-20/}"
,Annote="Relied on MVD (Multivalent Document Model) \cite{Ph:MvA}"
,Keyword="\K{System!Multivalent Document} $\bullet$ \K{interface}
$\bullet$ \K{annotation} $\bullet$ \K{System!WWW}"
}
@InCollection{Ma:DLRHW
,Author="Anne Mangen and Jean-Luc Velay"
,Title="Digitizing Literacy: Reflections on the Haptics of Writing"
,Chapter=20 ,Pages=385#"--"#401
,BookTitle="Advances in Haptics" ,CROSSREF={Za:AiH}
,Annote="Compare with Piolat et al.'s Cognitive Effort during Note
Taking \cite{Pi:CEDNT}"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@Book{Za:AiH
,Title="Advances in Haptics"
,Editor="Mehrdad Hosseini Zadeh"
,Publisher="InTech"
,Year=2010
,ISBN="978-953-307-093-3"
,URL="http://www.intechopen.com/books/show/title/advances-in-haptics"
}
@Article{Wo:FMCFA
,Title="From the Margins to the Center: The Future of Annotation"
,Author="Joanna L. Wolfe and Christine M. Neuwirth"
,Journal="J. of Business and Technical Communication"
,Year=2001 ,Month=jul ,Volume=15 ,Issue=3 ,Pages=333#"--"#371
,DOI="10.1177/105065190101500304"
,URL="http://jbt.sagepub.com/content/15/3/333"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}
@InProceedings{Wa:DE
,Author = {Walker, Janet H.}
,Title = {Document Examiner: delivery interface for hypertext documents}
,Booktitle = HT87 ,CROSSREF="HT87"
,year = 1987
,pages = 307#"--"#323
,doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/317426.317448}
}
@InCollection{Mo:LV
,Author="Harvey Molotch"
,Title="Leaps and Visions"
,BookTitle="Where Stuff Comes From: How Toasters, Toilets, Cars,
Computers and Many Other Things Come To Be As They Are"
,Pages=68#"--"#71
,Year=2003 ,Publisher="Taylor \& Francis"
}
@InCollection{Mo:SH
,Author="Harvey Molotch"
,Title="The Semiotic Handle"
,BookTitle="Where Stuff Comes From"
,Pages=25#","#" "#82#"--"#84
,Year=2003 ,Publisher="Taylor \& Francis"
}
@Article{Mc:HpathFall,
Title="The {``}Homeopathic Fallacy{''} in Learning from Hypertext",
Author="Jean McKendree and Will Reader and Nick Hammon",
Journal="{interactions}",
Volume="{ii}", Number=3, Month=jul, Year=1995,
URL="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/208666.208687",
}
@Misc{Di:Killam06
,Title="Putting the Social into the Technical: By Design Not By Chance"
,Month=16#" "#mar ,Year=2006
,Author="Andrew Dillon"
,Location="Halifax, Canada"
,Note="Killam Lecture Series at Dalhousie University (Halifax, Canada)"
}
@Book{McB:RM
,Author="Donald H. McBurney and Theresa L. White"
,Title="Research Methods"
,Year=2004 ,Edition="6th"
,Publisher="Wadsworth" ,Address="Toronto"
,ISBN="0-534-52418-4"
,Annote="Jack Duffy says (12 Feb 2004, e-mail) that these authors
claim that a $p$ level of $.10$ is acceptable for
\emph{exploratory} research"
}
@InProceedings{Go:RiO
,Author = "Gene Golovchinsky"
,Title = "Reading in the office"
,BookTitle = "Proc. of the 2008 ACM workshop on Research advances in
large digital book repositories"
,Series = {BooksOnline '08}
,Year = 2008
,Location = "Napa Valley, {CA}, {USA}"
,Pages = 21#"--"#24
,URL = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1458412.1458420"
,doi = "http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1458412.1458420"
,publisher = {ACM}
,address = "New York, {NY}, {USA}"
}
@Book{Go:CPW
,Author="Ernest Gowers and Sidney Greenbaum and Janet Whitcut"
,Title="The Complete Plain Words"
,Publisher="Penguin"
,Year="1987"
}
@InCollection{Ch:EoH,
Author="Davida Charney",
Title="The Effect of Hypertext on Processes of Reading and Writing",
Chapter=10, Pages=238#" -- "#263,
BookTitle="Literacy and Computers: The Complications of Teaching and
Learning with Technology",
Publisher="The Modern Language Association of America", Year=1994,
Address="New York, {NY}",
Editor="Cynthia L. Selfe and Susan Hilligoss",
Annote="Charney presents an excellent synthesis of psychological
and linguistic theory and experimentation to show what we know about
the effects of hypertext on readers, and how writers might adapt
their writing to new forms. She also points out where the research
is lacking or contradictory.",
URL="http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/%7Echarney/homepage/Articles/Charney_hypertext.pdf",
Keyword="\K{Review} $\bullet$ \K{Reading} $\bullet$ \K{CogPsych}"
}
@Book{Ad:HTRaB
,Author="Mortimer J. Adler and Charles {van Doren}"
,Title="How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent
Reading"
,Publisher="Simon \& Schuster, Inc." ,Year=1972
,Address="Toronto"
,ISBN="0-671-212209-5"
}
@InCollection{deB:RRL
,Author="R. de Beauregard"
,Title="Readers Responding to Literature: Coming to Grips with
Reality"
,Pages=192#"--"#210
,BookTitle="Reader Response to Literature: The Empirical Dimension"
,Editor="Elaine F. Narduccio"
,Address="The Hague"
,Publisher="Mouton de Gruyter"
,Year=1992
}
@Article{Go:IER
,Author="Ernest T. Goertz and Mark Sadoski and Michael L. Stowe and
Thomas G. Fetsco and Susan G. Kemp"
,Title="Imagery and Emotional Response in Reading: Quantitative and
qualitative analyses"
,Journal="Poetics" ,Year=1993
,Volume=22 ,Number="1--2" ,Month=sep ,Pages=35#"--"#49
,DOI="10.1016/0304-422X(93)90019-D"
}
@Book{Cr:TPR
,Author="R. G. Crowder and R. K. Wagner"
,Title="The Psychology of Reading: An Introduction"
,Edition="second" ,Year=1992
,Publisher="Oxford University Press"
,Address="Oxford, UK"
}
@Article{Kn:ELTC
,Author="E. W. E. M. Kneepkens and R. A. Zwaan"
,Title="Emotions and Literary Text Comprehension"
,Journal="Poetics" ,Year=1993
,Volume=23 ,Number="1--2" ,Month=jan ,pages=125#"--"#138
,DOI="10.1016/0304-422X(94)00021-W"
}
@Article{Br:SAST
,Author="John Bradley and Paul Vetch"
,Title="Supporting Annotation as a Scholarly Tool—Experiences From
the Online Chopin Variorum Edition"
,Journal="Literary and Linguistic Computing"
,Volume=22 ,Number=2 ,Pages=225#"--"#241
,DOI="10.1093/llc/fqm001"
,Keyword="\K{annotation}"
}