With the selection of devices encompassing a wider range of computing surfaces, along with the near ubiquity of wireless networks, the nature of the workspace has become distributed over multiple locations and digital artifacts. We interviewed 22 professionals across a wide range of industries about their use of artifacts in their workflows to discover new cross-device interaction paradigms and issues. We explore the impact of today's cloud services and appbased computing on how devices are used together. Gaps in data management and cross-device interactions were identified as the main obstacles and opportunities for improvement for multi-device interaction.
We explore the design space for using object motion trajectories to create and edit visual elements in various media across space and time. We introduce a suite of pen-based techniques that facilitate fluid stylization, annotation and editing of space-time content such as video, slide presentations and 2D animation, utilizing pressure and multi-touch input. We implemented and evaluated these techniques in DirectPaint, a system for creating free-hand painting and annotation over video.
We apply the "Physics of Notations" theory to design MAV-Vis, a concrete syntax for partial models, i.e., models where design uncertainty is explicitly captured. To validate our implementation of this theory in creating MAV-Vis, we designed and executed an empirical user study comparing the cognitive effectiveness of MAV-Vis with the existing, ad-hoc notation, MAVText. We measured the ease, speed, and accuracy of each notation for reading and writing partial models.
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