CS547 Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (Seminar on People, Computers, and Design)
Fridays 12:50-2:05 · Gates B01 · Open to the public- 20 years of speakers
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Thomas A. Phelps||Robert Wilensky · Dept. of Computer Science, UC Berkeley||Dept. of Computer Science, UC Berkeley
Multivalent Documents: Documents as interfaces to information in networked digital repositories January 26, 1996
Digital documents thus far have have largely mirrored their pre-digital ancestors. As such, they provide little enhancement of non-digital counterparts other than searching and hyperlinks. We believe that far greater functionality is desirable and possible. To achieve such functionality, we have been developing a new model of documents, called "multivalent documents". A multivalent document comprises any number of distinct, but intimately related, layers of content, along with small, dynamically loaded programs, called behaviors. In effect, each document becomes an interface to its particular set of contents. Multivalent documents are especially well-suited to the highly networked work, as the various layers of a document can reside on different machines, or even be created dynamically. A prototype version of MVDs has been implemented in Java. This prototype allows access to our digital library collection of scanned page images, but with added functionality. In particular, users can search for terms in a page image, and have the resulting matches outline on the screen; they can select regions of the image and paste ASCII text created from the image by optical character recognition; some tables in the images have active properties, such as sorting themselves in response to mouse clicks. Other functionality under development includes distributed annotations and geographic information systems capabilities. |
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