Modern Information Retrieval Chapter 10: User Interfaces and Visualization - by Marti Hearst |
Contents |
The field of human-computer interaction is a broad one, and this chapter touches on only a small subset of pertinent issues. For further information, see the excellent texts on user interface design by Shneiderman [shneiderman97], information seeking behavior by Marchionini [march], and digital libraries by Lesk [lesk97]. An excellent book on visual design is that of Mullet and Sano [mullet95]. Tufte has written thought-provoking and visually engaging books on the power of information visualization [tufte83][tufte90] and a collection of papers on information visualization has been edited by Card et al. [card98].
This chapter has discussed many ideas for improving the human-computer
interaction experience for information seekers. This is the most
rapidly
developing area of information access today, and improvements
in the interface are likely to lead the way toward better search
results and better-enabled information creators and users. Research
in the area of human-computer interaction is difficult because the
field is relatively new, and because it can be difficult to obtain
strong results when running user studies. These challenges
should simply encourage those who really want to influence the
information access systems of tomorrow.
The author gratefully acknowledges the generous and helpful comments on the contents of this chapter by Gary Marchionini and Ben Shneiderman, the excellent administrative assistance of Barbara Goto, and the great faith and patience of Ricardo Baeza-Yates and Berthier Ribeiro-Neto.