Collaborative interface agents
AAAI '94 Proceedings of the twelfth national conference on Artificial intelligence (vol. 1)
The FindMe Approach to Assisted Browsing
IEEE Expert: Intelligent Systems and Their Applications
Experiences with GroupLens: marking usenet useful again
ATEC '97 Proceedings of the annual conference on USENIX Annual Technical Conference
Toward case-based preference elicitation: similarity measures on preference structures
UAI'98 Proceedings of the Fourteenth conference on Uncertainty in artificial intelligence
Problem-focused incremental elicitation of multi-attribute tility models
UAI'97 Proceedings of the Thirteenth conference on Uncertainty in artificial intelligence
Common sense investing: bridging the gap between expert and novice
CHI '04 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Interactively building agents for consumer-side data mining
Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
iCARE: intelligent customer assistance for recommending eyewear
Proceedings of the 11th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
What am I gonna wear?: scenario-oriented recommendation
Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
User-centered design of preference elicitation interfaces for decision support
USAB'10 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on HCI in work and learning, life and leisure: workgroup human-computer interaction and usability engineering
Towards compositional design and evaluation of preference elicitation interfaces
HCD'11 Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Human centered design
User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction
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How do we know if we can afford a particular purchase? We can find out what the payments might be and check our balances on various accounts, but does this answer the question? What we really need to know is how this purchase would affect our other goals. What do I have to give up to afford this purchase?Personal Choice Point is a financial planning tool that addresses these questions by enabling a user to explore the repercussions of her decisions at the level of her lifestyle goals, not just her accounts. The user is presented with a graphical representation of primary lifestyle goals such as home, car, vacation, education, etc. As the user selects goals and modifies them, it presents the impact on the users life by graphically depicting the impact of a decision on her other goals. In effect, Personal Choice Point is a planner that helps restrict the users search for a suitable allocation of resources among goals to the likely set of allocations, from the much larger space of possible ones. The result is a system that changes the focus of the users task from managing the mechanics of resource allocation to the evaluation and selection of likely ones