A “pile” metaphor for supporting casual organization of information
CHI '92 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Finding and reminding: file organization from the desktop
ACM SIGCHI Bulletin
Finding and using implicit structure in human-organized spatial layouts of information
CHI '95 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Meme media and a world-wide meme pool
MULTIMEDIA '96 Proceedings of the fourth ACM international conference on Multimedia
Data mountain: using spatial memory for document management
Proceedings of the 11th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology
XML-GL: a graphical language for querying and restructuring XML documents
WWW '99 Proceedings of the eighth international conference on World Wide Web
Presto: an experimental architecture for fluid interactive document spaces
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI)
Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
AVI '00 Proceedings of the working conference on Advanced visual interfaces
Extending document management systems with user-specific active properties
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
BBQ: A Visual Interface for Integrated Browsing and Querying of XML
VDB 5 Proceedings of the Fifth Working Conference on Visual Database Systems: Advances in Visual Information Management
CA '95 Proceedings of the Computer Animation
Toward an information visualization workspace: combining multiple means of expression
Human-Computer Interaction
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Spurred on by the eager adoption of XML, the world appears to be on the verge of a revolution in the ease with which information resources from diverse, remote providers can be brought together into new assemblies, expressing new concepts. To benefit from this revolution we will need frameworks that help providers to organise their information and enable access to it, and tools that will help would-be users of these resources to find and combine the pieces that they want. We report our ongoing research on the Topica framework and the Context Workbench, that together address these new challenges in a spirit of helping information users to make their own sense out of the sea of possibilities.