Context-sensitive, graphic presentation of information
SIGGRAPH '82 Proceedings of the 9th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
Information presentation through default displays
Information presentation through default displays
An information presentation system
IJCAI'81 Proceedings of the 7th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 2
Specifying composite illustrations with communicative goals
UIST '89 Proceedings of the 2nd annual ACM SIGGRAPH symposium on User interface software and technology
Automated generation of intent-based 3D Illustrations
Proceedings of the 18th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
AWI: a workbench for semi-automated illustration design
AVI '94 Proceedings of the workshop on Advanced visual interfaces
Top-down hierarchical planning of coherent visual discourse
Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
An Object-Oriented Approach to the Solid Modeling of Empirical Data
IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications
Graphical deep knowledge for intelligent machine drafting
IJCAI'87 Proceedings of the 10th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 1
A formal specification scheme for network diagrams that facilitates automated design
Journal of Visual Languages and Computing
Avoiding unwanted conversational implicatures in text and graphics
AAAI'90 Proceedings of the eighth National conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 1
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A technique is presented for automatically synthesizing graphical object descriptions from high-level specifications. The technique includes mechanisms for describing, selecting, and combining primitive elements of object descriptions. Underlying these mechanisms are a referential framework for describing information used in the construction of object descriptions and a computational model of the object-synthesis process. This technique has been implemented in two prototype systems to synthesize object descriptions in near-real time. One system creates graphical displays of information that resides in a conventional database. The other system is a computer graphicist's tool for creating backgrounds of complex, three-dimensional scenes.