Our increasingly smart environments will sense, track and model users and provide them with personalized services. We can already embed computers in everyday objects such as shirt buttons and pencils; objects of all sizes, from wristwatches to billboards, will soon incorporate high-quality flexible displays; we have improved access to wireless Internet communication; and we are now transitioning from traditional linear to targeted interactive media. The convergence of these factors — miniaturization, display technologies, wireless communication, and interactive media — will allow us to leave our desktop computers and move to a radical computing paradigm, the ubiquitous display environment, where media and visual content will support a rich variety of display devices that enable users to interact with information artifacts in a seamless manner.
This is one of the most exciting and important areas of technology development and this book addresses the challenge within the context of an educational and cultural experience. This is inherently a multidisciplinary field and the contributions span the related research aspects, including system architecture and communications issues, and intelligent user interface aspects such as aesthetics and privacy. On the scientific side, the authors integrate artificial intelligence, user modeling, temporal and spatial reasoning, intelligent user interfaces, and user-centric design methodologies in their work, while on the technological side they integrate mobile and wireless networking infrastructures, interfaces, group displays, and context-driven adaptive presentations.
This book is of value to researchers and practitioners working on all aspects of ubiquitous display environments, and we hope it leads to innovations in human education, cultural heritage appreciation, and scientific development.
Tabla de materias
Ubiquitous Display Environments: An Overview (Tsvi Kuflik).- Challenges and Solutions of Ubiquitous User Modeling (Tsvi Kuflik, Judy Kay, Bob Kummerfeld).- Context-Sensitive Display Environments (Florian Daiber, Antonio Krüger, Johannes Schöning, Jörg Müller).- Perspectives on Reasoning About Time (Martin Charles Golumbic).- Shared Interfaces for Co-located Interaction (Massimo Zancanaro).- Considering the Aesthetics of Ubiquitous Displays (Noam Tractinsky, Eleanor Eytam).- The Design, Deployment and Evaluation of Situated Display Based Systems to Support Coordination and Community (Keith Cheverst, Faisal Taher, Matthew Fisher, Daniel Fitton, Nick Taylor).- xio Screen — Experiences Gained from Building a Series of Prototypes of Interactive Public Displays (KP Ludwig John, Thomas Rist).- Audience Measurement for Digital Signage: Exploring the Audience’s Perspective (Jörg Müller, Keith Cheverst).- Analysis and Prediction of Museum Visitors’ Behavioral Pattern Types (Tsvi Kuflik, Zvi Boger, Massimo Zancanaro).- Trust Management of Ubiquitous Multi-display Environments (Ekatarina Kurdyukova, Elisabeth André, Karin Leichtenstern).- From Research to Practice: Automated Negotiations with People (Raz Lin, Sarit Kraus).- Virtual Technologies and Empowerment of Users of Rehabilitation (Naomi Schreuer, Patrice L. (Tamar) Weiss.
Sobre el autor
Prof. Antonio Krüger is a professor of computer science at Saarland University. He heads the Ubiquitous Media Technology Lab and is the scientific director of the Innovative Retail Laboratory at the German Research Center for AI (DFKI). Before that he was a professor at and the managing director of the Institute for Geoinformaitcs (ifgi) at the University of Münster. His research interests include mobile and ubiquitous spatial assistance systems, combining the research fields of intelligent user interfaces, user modeling, cognitive science, and ubiquitous computing.
Dr. Tsvi Kuflik is a faculty member of the Management Information Systems Dept. in the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Haifa. His research interests include user modeling, ubiquitous user modeling, information filtering, multiagent systems architectures, software engineering, and software reuse. Among others, he has taught courses on software engineering, software quality assurance, information retrieval and artificial Intelligence. His previous work experience includes research at ITC-irst in Trento, Italy and management roles in software and technology development in private industry.