Institute for Systems Research

Permanent URI for this communityhttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/4375

Browse

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    Immediate Usability: A Case Study of Public Access Design for a Community Photo Library (2003)
    (2005) Kules, Bill; Kang, Hyunmo; Plaisant, Catherine; Rose, Anne; Shneiderman, Ben; ISR
    This paper describes a novel instantiation of a digital photo library in a public access system. It demonstrates how designers can utilize characteristics of a target user community (social constraints, trust, and a lack of anonymity) to provide capabilities that would be impractical in other types of public access systems. It also presents a compact set of design principles and guidelines for ensuring the immediate usability of public access information systems. These principles and guidelines were derived from our experience developing PhotoFinder Kiosk, a community photo library. Attendees of a major HCI conference (CHI 2001 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems) successfully used the tool to browse and annotate collections of photographs spanning 20 years of HCI-related conferences, producing a richly annotated photo history of the field of human-computer interaction. Observations and log data were used to evaluate the tool and develop the guidelines. They provide specific guidance for practitioners, as well as a useful framework for additional research in public access interfaces.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    Immediate Usability: Kiosk design principles from the CHI 2001 Photo Library (2001)
    (2005) Kules, Bill; Kang, Hyunmo; Plaisant, Catherine; Rose, Anne; Shneiderman, Ben; ISR
    This paper describes a novel set of design principles and guidelines for ensuring the immediate usability of public access systems. These principles and guidelines were formulated while developing PhotoFinder Kiosk, a community photo library. Attendees of CHI 2001 successfully used the tool to browse and annotate collections of photographs spanning 20 years of CHI and related conferences, producing a richly annotated photo history of the field of human-computer interaction. We used observations and log data to evaluate the tool and refine the guidelines. They provide specific guidance for practitioners, as well as a useful framework for additional research in public access interfaces.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    Visualizing Digital Library Search Results with Categorical and Hierarchial Axes
    (1999) Shneiderman, Ben; Feldman, David; Rose, Anne; ISR
    Digital library search results are usually shown as a textual list, with 10-20 items per page. Viewing several thousand search results at once on a two-dimensional display with continuous variables is a promising alternative. Since these displays can overwhelm some users, we created a simplified two-dimensional display that uses categorical and hierarchical axes, called hieraxes. Users appreciate the meaningful and limited number of terms on each hieraxis. At each grid point of the display we show a cluster of color-coded dots or a bar chart. Users see the entire result set and can then click on labels to move down a level in the hierarchy. Handling broad hierarchies and arranging for imposed hierarchies led to additional design innovations. We applied hieraxes to a digital video library used by middle school teachers and a legal information system.