J. C. Campos and G. J. Doherty
Reasoning about Time in Dynamic Information Displays
In G.J. Doherty, M. Massink and M.D. Wilson, editors, Continuity in Future Computing Systems - Proceedings of I3 Spring Days Workshop, volume RAL-CONF-2001-001 of RAL Conference Proceedings, pages 80-95. Council for the Central Laboratory of the Research Councils. 2001. (ISSN: 1362-0231)

Abstract

With increasing use of computing systems while on the move and in constantly changing conditions, whether it is via mobile devices, wearable computers or embedded systems in the environment, time plays an increasingly important role in interaction. The way in which information is represented in an interface is fundamental to interaction with it, and how we use the information in the users tasks and activities. Dynamic representations where the user must perceive changes in the information displayed over time pose a further challenge to the designer. The diminutive size and limited display capabilities of many ubiquitous computing devices further motivate careful design of these displays. In this paper we look at how time can be taken into account when reasoning about representational issues from the early stages of design. We look at a model which can be used to reason about these issues in a structured fashion, and apply it to an example.

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@INPROCEEDINGS{CamposD01,
 author = {J. C. Campos and G. J. Doherty},
 title = {Reasoning about Time in Dynamic Information Displays},
 booktitle = {Continuity in Future Computing Systems - Proceedings of I3 Spring Days Workshop},
 year = {2001},
 editor = {G.J. Doherty and M. Massink and M.D. Wilson},
 volume = {RAL-CONF-2001-001},
 series = {RAL Conference Proceedings},
 pages = {80-95}, 
 month = {April},
 publisher = {Council for the Central Laboratory of the Research Councils},
 note = {ISSN: 1362-0231},
 hdl = {1822/2329},
 abstract = {With increasing use of computing systems while on the move and in constantly changing conditions, whether it is via mobile devices, wearable computers or embedded systems in the environment, time plays an increasingly important role in interaction. The way in which information is represented in an interface is fundamental to interaction with it, and how we use the information in the users tasks and activities. Dynamic representations where the user must perceive changes in the information displayed over time pose a further challenge to the designer. The diminutive size and limited display capabilities of many ubiquitous computing devices further motivate careful design of these displays. In this paper we look at how time can be taken into account when reasoning about representational issues from the early stages of design. We look at a model which can be used to reason about these issues in a structured fashion, and apply it to an example.}
}

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