Effective information access involves rich interactions between users and information residing in diverse locations. Users seek and retrieve information from the sources—for example, file serves, databases, and digital libraries—and use various tools to browse, manipulate, reuse, and generally process the information. We have developed a number of techniques that support various aspects of the process of user/information interaction. These techniques can be considered attempts to increase the bandwidth and quality of the interactions between users and information in an information workspace—an environment designed to support information work (see Figure 1).
%0 Journal Article
%1 rao1995interaction
%A Rao, Ramana
%A Pedersen, Jan O.
%A Hearst, Marti A.
%A Mackinlay, Jock D.
%A Card, Stuart K.
%A Masinter, Larry
%A Halvorsen, Per-Kristian
%A Robertson, George C.
%C New York, NY, USA
%D 1995
%I ACM
%J Communications of the ACM
%K citation digital dl exploration interaction library science search visualization
%N 4
%P 29--39
%R 10.1145/205323.205326
%T Rich Interaction in the Digital Library
%U http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/205323.205326
%V 38
%X Effective information access involves rich interactions between users and information residing in diverse locations. Users seek and retrieve information from the sources—for example, file serves, databases, and digital libraries—and use various tools to browse, manipulate, reuse, and generally process the information. We have developed a number of techniques that support various aspects of the process of user/information interaction. These techniques can be considered attempts to increase the bandwidth and quality of the interactions between users and information in an information workspace—an environment designed to support information work (see Figure 1).
@article{rao1995interaction,
abstract = {Effective information access involves rich interactions between users and information residing in diverse locations. Users seek and retrieve information from the sources—for example, file serves, databases, and digital libraries—and use various tools to browse, manipulate, reuse, and generally process the information. We have developed a number of techniques that support various aspects of the process of user/information interaction. These techniques can be considered attempts to increase the bandwidth and quality of the interactions between users and information in an information workspace—an environment designed to support information work (see Figure 1).},
acmid = {205326},
added-at = {2014-04-11T10:39:42.000+0200},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
author = {Rao, Ramana and Pedersen, Jan O. and Hearst, Marti A. and Mackinlay, Jock D. and Card, Stuart K. and Masinter, Larry and Halvorsen, Per-Kristian and Robertson, George C.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/28a3c3119d6f98387321cdeb2d7e348ff/jaeschke},
doi = {10.1145/205323.205326},
interhash = {0dd8e252ff934f8c036871ef645b904a},
intrahash = {8a3c3119d6f98387321cdeb2d7e348ff},
issn = {0001-0782},
issue_date = {April 1995},
journal = {Communications of the ACM},
keywords = {citation digital dl exploration interaction library science search visualization},
month = apr,
number = 4,
numpages = {11},
pages = {29--39},
publisher = {ACM},
timestamp = {2014-07-28T15:57:31.000+0200},
title = {Rich Interaction in the Digital Library},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/205323.205326},
volume = 38,
year = 1995
}