| Christopher Williamson and Ben Shneiderman. The Dynamic HomeFinder: evaluating Dynamic Queries in a real- estate information exploration system. In Ben Shneiderman, editor, Sparks of Innovation in Human-Computer Interaction. Ablex Publishing Corp, 1993. |
....is defined, and a graphical display program may present the data in the view visually. If the user changes the view definition, the system must be able to recompute the view fast in order to keep the application interactive. An interface for such queries in a real estate system is reported in [WS93] where they are called dynamic queries [AWS93] After posing a query, the user will analyze the result. He she can modify the query (say by changing the price range of houses of interest) if too many or too few answers are presented. Data archaeology [BST 92, BST 93] is another ....
....may present the data in the view visually. If the user changes the view definition, the system must be able to recompute the view fast in order to keep the application interactive. An interface for such queries in a real estate system is reported in [WS93] where they are called dynamic queries [AWS93] After posing a query, the user will analyze the result. He she can modify the query (say by changing the price range of houses of interest) if too many or too few answers are presented. Data archaeology [BST 92, BST 93] is another application where an archaeologist tries to discover ....
Christopher Williamson and Ben Shneiderman. The Dynamic HomeFinder: evaluating Dynamic Queries in a real- estate information exploration system. In Ben Shneiderman, editor, Sparks of Innovation in Human-Computer Interaction. Ablex Publishing Corp, 1993.
....materialized, and a graphical display program may present the data in the view visually. If the user changes the view definition, the system must be able to recompute the view fast in order to keep the application interactive. An interface for such queries in a real estate system is reported in [WS93] where they are called dynamic queries [AWS93] Data archaeology [BST 92, BST 93] is another application where an archaeologist tries to discover rules about data by formulating queries, looking at the results of the query, and then changing the query iteratively as the archaeologist s ....
....may present the data in the view visually. If the user changes the view definition, the system must be able to recompute the view fast in order to keep the application interactive. An interface for such queries in a real estate system is reported in [WS93] where they are called dynamic queries [AWS93] Data archaeology [BST 92, BST 93] is another application where an archaeologist tries to discover rules about data by formulating queries, looking at the results of the query, and then changing the query iteratively as the archaeologist s understanding improves. We consider the problem ....
Christopher Williamson and Ben Shneiderman. The Dynamic HomeFinder: evaluating Dynamic Queries in a real- estate information exploration system. In Ben Shneiderman, editor, Sparks of Innovation in Human-Computer Interaction. Ablex Publishing Corp, 1993.
....and by an NSF Young Investigator award. present the data in the view visually. If the user changes the view definition, the system must be able to recompute the view fast in order to keep the application interactive. An interface for such queries in a real estate system is reported in [WS93] where they are called dynamic queries [AWS93] Data archaeology [BST 92, BST 93] is another application where an archaeologist tries to discover rules about data by formulating queries, looking at the results of the query, and then changing the query iteratively as the archaeologist s ....
....present the data in the view visually. If the user changes the view definition, the system must be able to recompute the view fast in order to keep the application interactive. An interface for such queries in a real estate system is reported in [WS93] where they are called dynamic queries [AWS93] Data archaeology [BST 92, BST 93] is another application where an archaeologist tries to discover rules about data by formulating queries, looking at the results of the query, and then changing the query iteratively as the archaeologist s understanding improves. We consider the problem ....
Christopher Williamson and Ben Shneiderman. The Dynamic HomeFinder: evaluating Dynamic Queries in a real- estate information exploration system. In Ben Shneiderman, editor, Sparks of Innovation in Human-Computer Interaction. Ablex Publishing Corp, 1993.
....and mass. 1] Pi DC Dynamic HomeFinder: A real estate system showing houses for sale in the DC area. Sliders and buttons are used to change parameters, such as the number of bedrooms or the presence of a garage. As parameters are changed points on a map of the region are updated in real time. [25] Pi Health statistics atlas: A system for showing American health statistics in graphical form. Sliders are used to set parameters which are represented on a colour coded map. 19] 2 APPLICATIONS WITH A VIEW TOWARDS TEXT DATABASES 3 Pi Unix directory browser: An interface to explore Unix ....
Christopher Williamson and Ben Shneiderman. "The Dynamic HomeFinder: Evaluating dynamic queries in a real-estate information exploration system". Technical Report CSTR -2819, Department of Computer Science, Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, 1991.
....materialized, and a graphical display program may present the data in the view visually. If the user changes the view definition, the system must be able to recompute the view fast in order to keep the application interactive. An interface for such queries in a real estate system is reported in [WS93] where they are called dynamic queries [AWS93] A preliminary version of this paper appeared as [GMR95] y Research supported by NSF grants IRI 91 16646 and IRI 92 23405. z Research supported by a grant from the AT T Foundation, by a David and Lucile Packard Foundation Fellowship in ....
....may present the data in the view visually. If the user changes the view definition, the system must be able to recompute the view fast in order to keep the application interactive. An interface for such queries in a real estate system is reported in [WS93] where they are called dynamic queries [AWS93] A preliminary version of this paper appeared as [GMR95] y Research supported by NSF grants IRI 91 16646 and IRI 92 23405. z Research supported by a grant from the AT T Foundation, by a David and Lucile Packard Foundation Fellowship in Science and Engineering, by a Sloan Foundation ....
Christopher Williamson and Ben Shneiderman. The Dynamic HomeFinder: evaluating Dynamic Queries in a real- estate information exploration system. In Ben Shneiderman, editor, Sparks of Innovation in Human-Computer Interaction. Ablex Publishing Corp, 1993.
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