Search (53 results, page 1 of 3)

  • × theme_ss:"Suchoberflächen"
  1. Schweibenz, W.; Thissen, F.: Qualität im Web : Benutzerfreundliche Webseiten durch Usability Evaluation (2003) 0.06
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    Content
    Einführung.- Grundlagen des Web-Designs.- Usability und Usability Engineering.- Usability Engineering und das Web.- Methodenfragen zur Usability Evaluation.Expertenorientierte Methoden.- Benutzerorientierte Methoden.- Suchmaschinenorientierte Methoden.- Literatur.Glossar.- Index.- Checklisten.
    Date
    22. 3.2008 14:24:08
  2. Memmel, T.: User interface specification for interactive software systems : process-, method- and tool-support for interdisciplinary and collaborative requirements modelling and prototyping-driven user interface specification (2009) 0.03
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    BK
    54.52 / Software engineering
    Classification
    54.52 / Software engineering
  3. O'Leary, M.: STN Easy solves sci-tech search woes : Web-based service opens powerful searching to sci-tech end users (1997) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Reviews STN Easy, a Web service that provides access to 2 dozen leading sci-tech databases which is produced jointly by the Chemical Abstracts Service of the American Chemical Society, Germany's FIZ-Karlsruhe, and Japan' SCience and Technology Corporation. It employs a graphical interface, relevance searching, and output based pricing. STN Easy is STN's solution for members of the technical community and others who are not users of the main STN service. The databases included the leading files in STN's major subject areas namely: SCISEARCH; Mathematics Abstracts; MEDLINE; EMBASE; BIOSIS; COMPENDEX; INSPEC; Worlds Patent Index; Inpadoc; US Patents Fulltext; PROMPT; and Chemical & Engineering News. Discusses searching; pricing; and the pros and cons of end user searching
  4. Preim, B.: Grundlagen, Fallbeispiele und innovative Anwendungsfelder : Entwicklung interaktiver Systeme (1999) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Wie geht der Mensch mit komplexen Computersystemen um? Wovon hängt die Effizienz der Interaktion ab? Ausgehend von Erkenntnissen der kognitiven Psychologie charakterisiert das Buch den Gestaltungsspielraum beim Entwurf interaktiver Systeme und erläutert die Anwendung verschiedener Interaktionstechniken und -stile. - Zunächst werden grundlegende Konzepte der Interaktion anhand von Beispielen aus dem alltäglichen Leben, wie Auto und Telefon, behandelt. Aus der nachfolgenden Problemanalyse werden Entwurfsprinzipien abgeleitet und in einem technischen Teil allgemeine Konzepte der Arbeitsweise von Fenstersystemen und deren Bestandteile detailliert erläutert: Fenster, Icons, Menüs, Zeigegeräte. Es wird argumentiert, daß der Prozeß der Entwicklung interaktiver Systeme stark iterativ ist und Zyklen aus Analyse, Entwurf und Testverfahren enthält. Konkrete Methoden für diese Schritte werden erläutert, wobei Testverfahren, Methoden zur Spezifikation interaktiver Systeme und Werkzeuge, die die Entwicklung unterstützen, einen breiten Raum einnehmen. Umfassend werden im abschließenden Teil moderne Anwendungsfelder, wie die Interaktion mit sehr großen Datenmengen (die Visualisierung großer Informationsräume), die Interaktion im WWW und die Interaktion mit 3D-Daten (die Entwicklung von 3D-Widgets), behandelt. Lehrbuch mit hohem Praxisbezug: Fallbeispiele aus der industriellen Praxis mit umsetzbaren Hinweisen und Methoden zur Entwicklung und Evaluierung interaktiver Systeme zugeschnitten auf die konstruktiven Aspekte der Interaktion Mensch - Computer mit hochaktuellen Themen wie die Entwicklung von 3D-Widgets und die Visualisierung großer Informationsräume mit hilfreichen gründlichen, oft tabellarischen Zusammenfassungen und einem ausführlichen Glossar zusätzlicher Service: auf einer zu dem Buch eingerichteten Web-Site stehen Folien zur Verfügung
    Series
    Springer-Lehrbuch
  5. Buzydlowski, J.W.; White, H.D.; Lin, X.: Term Co-occurrence Analysis as an Interface for Digital Libraries (2002) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 2.2003 17:25:39
    22. 2.2003 18:16:22
  6. Callahan, E.: Interface design and culture (2004) 0.01
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    Abstract
    It is common knowledge that computer interfaces in different cultures vary. Interface designers present information in different languages, use different iconography to designate concepts, and employ different standards for dates, time, and numbers. These manifest differences beg the question of how easily an interface designed in one country can be used in and transferred to another country. Are the challenges involved in adaptation merely cosmetic or are they shaped by more profound forces? Do all cultures respond to interfaces in similar ways, or does culture itself shape user comprehension? If culture is a factor in explaining varied user reactions to comparable interfaces, what specific cultural dimensions are responsible for the divergences? Do differences reside mainly at the level of national cultures, or do they depend an other variables such as class, gender, age, education, and expertise with technology? In the face of a potentially large number of explanatory variables, how do we delimit a workable concept of culture and yet remain cognizant of other factors that might shape the results of culture and interface research? Questions such as these have been asked in the ergonomics community since the early 1970s, when the industrialization of developing countries created a need for more research an cultural differences (Honold, 1999), resulting in an increased interest in the universal applicability of ergonomic principles. This trend continued after the reunification of Germany and the emergence of market economies in Eastern Europe (Nielsen, 1990). In the mid-1990s, as markets outside the U.S. rapidly expanded, it became necessary to develop appropriate user interfaces for non-Western cultures in order to facilitate international cooperation. This fresh impetus for research led to the development of practical guidelines and a body of Gase studies and examples of possible solutions. Most recently we have seen attempts to provide a theoretical foundation for cross-cultural usability engineering and experimental comparison studies (Honold, 1999).
  7. Chen, C.: Top Ten Problems in Visual Interfaces to Digital Libraries (2002) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 2.2003 17:25:39
    22. 2.2003 18:13:11
  8. Shen, R.; Wang, J.; Fox, E.A.: ¬A Lightweight Protocol between Digital Libraries and Visualization Systems (2002) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 2.2003 17:25:39
    22. 2.2003 18:15:14
  9. Börner, K.; Chen, C.: Visual Interfaces to Digital Libraries : Motivation, Utilization, and Socio-technical Challenges (2002) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 2.2003 17:25:39
    22. 2.2003 18:20:07
  10. Christoffel, M.; Schmitt, B.: Accessing Libraries as Easy as a Game (2002) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 2.2003 17:25:39
    22. 2.2003 18:19:01
  11. Boyack, K.W.; Wylie,B.N.; Davidson, G.S.: Information Visualization, Human-Computer Interaction, and Cognitive Psychology : Domain Visualizations (2002) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 2.2003 17:25:39
    22. 2.2003 18:17:40
  12. Evens, M.W.: Natural language interface for an expert system (2002) 0.01
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    Abstract
    A natural language interface to an expert system is a program that enables the user to communicate with the system in English or some other human language. It is designed to spare the user from learning some special programming language or command input language. Today this input is almost always typed at a keyboard or assembled with a mouse. Only a few research systems understand spoken input and produce spoken output. The precise definition of an expert system is a matter of argument. For the purposes of this article an expert system is a computer system that is capable of providing expert advice or otherwise performing at an expert level, usually in a rather narrow area. An excellent discussion of the controversy surrounding this term is given in Ref. 1. A typical expert system has at least three different kinds of interfaces. Some have four. One interface is designed to understand user queries and commands, another to generate answers and explanations. The knowledge-engineering interface provides a way for a human expert to endow the system with the expertise it needs to function. This may be a natural language interface as well. Some expert systems also produce documents, such as medical case reports or legal wills or petitions for divorce. The first paradigm expert system, Shortliffe's MYCIN system (2), provided natural language interfaces for both the end user and the engineer. The first widely used expert system that Shortliffe developed, ONCOCIN (3, 4), not only provided natural language interfaces for the end user and the knowledge engineer, it also generated the lengthy patient reports required by complex drug trials. In this article we will concentrate mainly an the natural language understanding and generation required to communicate with the end user, but we will also discuss interfaces for the knowledge engineer. We will describe some document generation techniques briefly.
  13. Grudin, J.: Human-computer interaction (2011) 0.01
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    Date
    27.12.2014 18:54:22
  14. Poynder, R.: WinSPIRS from SilverPlatter (1994) 0.01
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    Date
    23. 1.1999 19:32:22
  15. Gliszczynski, S. von; Kaiser, D.: GRIPS-Funktionen : GRIPS-MainMenu: Benutzerführung von Anfang an (1994) 0.01
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    Date
    23. 1.1999 19:23:22
  16. Lange, M.; Sandholzer, U.; Wiegandt, B.: Neue Oberfläche und Funktionalitäten für die GBV-Datenbanken (2008) 0.01
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    Date
    26.10.2008 19:31:22
    Source
    Mitteilungsblatt der Bibliotheken in Niedersachsen und Sachsen-Anhalt. 2008, H.139, S.22-24
  17. Wenzel, A.: MIMOSA - eine einheitliche Benutzeroberfläche für CD-ROM Serien in der Patentinformation (1998) 0.01
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    Source
    Information und Märkte: 50. Deutscher Dokumentartag 1998, Kongreß der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Dokumentation e.V. (DGD), Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, 22.-24. September 1998. Hrsg. von Marlies Ockenfeld u. Gerhard J. Mantwill
  18. Mandl, T.; Stempfhuber, M.: Softwareergonomische Gestaltung von Wirtschaftsinformationssystemen am Beispiel von ELVIRA (1998) 0.01
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    Source
    Information und Märkte: 50. Deutscher Dokumentartag 1998, Kongreß der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Dokumentation e.V. (DGD), Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, 22.-24. September 1998. Hrsg. von Marlies Ockenfeld u. Gerhard J. Mantwill
  19. Vaughan, M.W.; Resnick, M.L.: Search user interfaces : best practices and future visions (2006) 0.01
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Years

Languages

  • e 43
  • d 10

Types

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  • m 6
  • s 1
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