Adapting the museum: a non-intrusive user modeling approach
UM '99 Proceedings of the seventh international conference on User modeling
HIPS: Hyper-Interaction within Physical Space
ICMCS '99 Proceedings of the 1999 IEEE International Conference on Multimedia Computing and Systems - Volume 02
Symbolic Authoring for Multilingual Natural Language Generation
SETN '02 Proceedings of the Second Hellenic Conference on AI: Methods and Applications of Artificial Intelligence
Adaptation in an Evolutionary Hypermedia System: Using Semantic and Petri Nets
AH '02 Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Adaptive Hypermedia and Adaptive Web-Based Systems
Adaptive Hypertext Design Environments: Putting Principles into Practice
AH '00 Proceedings of the International Conference on Adaptive Hypermedia and Adaptive Web-Based Systems
Generating adaptive multimedia presentations based on a semiotic framework
AI'05 Proceedings of the 18th Canadian Society conference on Advances in Artificial Intelligence
Developing AMIE: an adaptive multimedia integrated environment
AMR'05 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Adaptive Multimedia Retrieval: user, context, and feedback
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In this paper, we discuss an approach that tries to blur the distinction between adaptive hypermedia and dynamic NLG-based hypermedia. The approach aims at finding an optimal trade-off between resource reuse and flexibility: existing atomic pieces of data are collected and properly annotated; at the interaction time, the system dynamically builds the nodes of the hypermedia composing different pieces together. The proposed annotation formalism is illustrated and a rule-based system to compose hypermedia nodes exploiting different knowledge sources is presented. Finally, the advantages of this approach with respect to adaptation and dynamic generation are discussed.