Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Virtual Reality Continuum and its Applications in Industry
Semi-automatic user interface generation considering pointing granularity
SMC'09 Proceedings of the 2009 IEEE international conference on Systems, Man and Cybernetics
Software refactoring process for adaptive user-interface composition
Proceedings of the 2nd ACM SIGCHI symposium on Engineering interactive computing systems
Xplain: an editor for building self-explanatory user interfaces by model-driven engineering
Proceedings of the 2nd ACM SIGCHI symposium on Engineering interactive computing systems
Self-explanatory user interfaces by model-driven engineering
Proceedings of the 2nd ACM SIGCHI symposium on Engineering interactive computing systems
Model-driven development and evolution of customized user interfaces
Proceedings of the 5th ACM SIGCHI symposium on Engineering interactive computing systems
Autonomous adaptation of user interfaces to support mobility in ambient intelligence systems
Proceedings of the 5th ACM SIGCHI symposium on Engineering interactive computing systems
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A Multi-target user interface is composed of a series of interconnected variations of the same user interfaces, but tailored for different targets or different contexts of use. When access to software applications must be guaranteed in more than one context of use, it is necessary to adapt these user interfaces in order to preserve their usability when the switch between contexts occur. For this purpose, this paper proposes a model and a presentation technique to express and manipulate the plasticity domain of a user interface. The plasticity domain denotes the set of contexts of use it is able to cover while preserving its usability. In this paper, we focus on one aspect of the context of use: the platform screen size. A window requires a graphical area for its rendering and manipulation by the enduser. The model supports the definition of this graphi-cal area in terms of window size and window place. The visualization technique helps in both making ob-servable the set of presentations that fit the available space, and perceiving which operations could help in switching from one presentation to another one. The first benefit is powerful for eliciting the candidate presentations when the context of use changes. The model has been integrated in UsiXML, a XML-compliant user interface description language.