2013
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-00615-4_18
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Design Principles for Spatio-Temporally Enabled PIM Tools: A Qualitative Analysis of Trip Planning

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Cited by 9 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…While this change is one of the requirements for tools designed to make every day information organization easier (cf. [1]) it also opens the door for increasingly sophisticated surveillance techniques. For example, Gutmann and Stern [23] highlighted the opportunities to improve the "understanding of human behavior in its environmental context" but at the same time warned of the potential breach of confidentiality statements made during data collection.…”
Section: Knowing (Almost) Everythingmentioning
confidence: 98%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…While this change is one of the requirements for tools designed to make every day information organization easier (cf. [1]) it also opens the door for increasingly sophisticated surveillance techniques. For example, Gutmann and Stern [23] highlighted the opportunities to improve the "understanding of human behavior in its environmental context" but at the same time warned of the potential breach of confidentiality statements made during data collection.…”
Section: Knowing (Almost) Everythingmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…It is said that 80% of all data have some form of spatial component 1 . A discussion about information privacy is thus always to a large extent a discussion about GeoPrivacy.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Even so, they are completely omitted from current formal task representations. Finally, it was shown by Abdalla et al (2013), that planning is an evolving process in which added components are checked for spatio-temporal alignment. Thus, the goal is a model capable to handle and aggregate various types of tasks (i.e., events and errands) and their object-requirements, under spatio-temporal constraints (Fig.…”
Section: Tools To Assist Our Prospective Memorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Raubal and Worboys [21,22] describe the problem of pathfinding in indoor environments, which is strongly related to cognitive science. Abdalla et al [36][37][38] analyze trip planning, decision-making, and influences on spatial-temporal personal information management.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In their paper, they decompose the overarching problem of "getting a passport" into sub-problems or tasks that have to be solved individually in a certain order. Additionally, references [36][37][38]41] show that the decomposition of spatial-temporal problems is also a matter of scale. This can be justified by the work of [41], where sub-problems (i.e., different levels) are modeled with a finer "resolution" of the representation of the universe of discourse.…”
Section: Process Characteristics and Problem-solving In Urban And Manmentioning
confidence: 99%