Publication statistics

Pub. period:1993-1995
Pub. count:4
Number of co-authors:3



Co-authors

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Robert Korfhage:1
Michael Lewis:1
Stephen C. Hirtle:1

 

 

Productive colleagues

Hanhwe Kim's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Michael Lewis:36
Robert Korfhage:10
Stephen C. Hirtle:3
 
 
 
May 21

Computer analyst to programmer: "You start coding. I'll go find out what they want."

-- Popular computer one-liner

 
 

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Hanhwe Kim

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Publications by Hanhwe Kim (bibliography)

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1995
 
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Kim, Hanhwe and Hirtle, Stephen C. (1995): Spatial Metaphors and Disorientation in Hypertext Browsing. In Behaviour and Information Technology, 14 (4) pp. 239-250.

The spatial metaphor can be used as a framework for explaining and designing tools that alleviate disorientation problems in hypertext systems. The approach based on this metaphor would involve developing tools analogous to navigational aids in physical environments and applying analogous concepts from research on human spatial processing and navigation in physical spaces. Research on hypertext browsing with respect to the spatial metaphor is reviewed and contrasted with the larger task context where users are trying to explore, learn, analyse, and summarize the contents of the hypertext space.

© All rights reserved Kim and Hirtle and/or Taylor and Francis

 
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Kim, Hanhwe (1995): BIRD: Browsing Interface for the Retrieval of Documents. In: Proceedings of the Eighteenth Annual International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval 1995. p. 363.

BIRD (Browsing Interface for the Retrieval of Documents) provides a visual interface for browsing and sifting through document collections. Documents behave like metal filings, and terms like magnets that attract the documents they index. Lists corresponding to any Boolean query can be built by iterative operations which involve separating a collection of documents into subsets according to one or two terms, merging selected subsets, and manually adding/deleting documents from the sets. Users can examine the documents in the lists at any time, and thus keep track of browsing sessions, while sifting through large collections of documents.

© All rights reserved Kim and/or ACM Press

1994
 
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Kim, Hanhwe and Korfhage, Robert (1994): BIRD: Browsing Interface for the Retrieval of Documents. In: VL 1994 1994. pp. 176-177.

1993
 
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Lewis, Michael and Kim, Hanhwe (1993): Noise and Emergent Features in Integrated Displays. In: Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 37th Annual Meeting 1993. pp. 520-523.

Process displays with the same perceptual resolution do the same job of conveying a process state to an operator. It is primarily the ability to convey relations and constraints that distinguishes good displays from poor ones. Object displays solve this problem by shifting monitoring to a situation unconstrained by the system's architecture, allowing the integration of parameters as features of a geometric object. In doing so, however, object displays sacrifice the ability to provide a context giving meaning to these relations. The emergent features approach does not rely on any particular form of representation, but identifies the discriminations among process states which must be made to perform a task then searches for some representation which makes these discriminations perceptually salient. A series of experiments (Wickens 1986, Carswell&Wickens 1987, Sanderson et al. 1989) have compared a triangle object display with conventional bar chart displays with disparate results. The present experiment investigates the effects of noise on monitoring performance for these two display formats and finds that the relative advantages of the input-output-input barchart are eliminated under high noise conditions.

© All rights reserved Lewis and Kim and/or Human Factors Society

 
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Changes to this page (author)

15 Feb 2010: Modified
16 Jun 2009: Added
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28 Apr 2003: Added

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Page maintainer: The Editorial Team
URL: http://www.interaction-design.org/references/authors/hanhwe_kim.html

Publication statistics

Pub. period:1993-1995
Pub. count:4
Number of co-authors:3



Co-authors

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Robert Korfhage:1
Michael Lewis:1
Stephen C. Hirtle:1

 

 

Productive colleagues

Hanhwe Kim's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Michael Lewis:36
Robert Korfhage:10
Stephen C. Hirtle:3
 
 
 
May 21

Computer analyst to programmer: "You start coding. I'll go find out what they want."

-- Popular computer one-liner

 
 

Featured chapter

Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann

Read Steve's chapter !

 
 

Help us help you!