GAF: Generic Adaptation Framework
AH '08 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Adaptive Hypermedia and Adaptive Web-Based Systems
Defining Adaptation in a Generic Multi Layer Model: CAM: The GRAPPLE Conceptual Adaptation Model
EC-TEL '08 Proceedings of the 3rd European conference on Technology Enhanced Learning: Times of Convergence: Technologies Across Learning Contexts
AH 12 years later: a comprehensive survey of adaptive hypermedia methods and techniques
The New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia - Adaptive Hypermedia
LAG 2.0: Refining a Reusable Adaptation Language and Improving on Its Authoring
EC-TEL '09 Proceedings of the 4th European Conference on Technology Enhanced Learning: Learning in the Synergy of Multiple Disciplines
The influence of adaptation on hypertext structures and navigation
Proceedings of the 21st ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
The next generation authoring adaptive hypermedia: using and evaluating the MOT3.0 and PEAL tools
Proceedings of the 21st ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
GALE: a highly extensible adaptive hypermedia engine
Proceedings of the 22nd ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
Semantic adaptation of multimedia documents
Multimedia Tools and Applications
A fully generic approach for realizing the adaptive web
SOFSEM'12 Proceedings of the 38th international conference on Current Trends in Theory and Practice of Computer Science
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"The Design of AHA!" is an adaptive hypertext, and thus not presented in its entirety in this short paper. Because it is not only a hypertext but also adaptive it cannot simply be presented using a linear paper or a set of HTML pages.This paper describes the design of, and demonstrates AHA! (Version 3.0), an Open Source adaptive hypermedia platform, capable of performing content and link adaptation in (x)html and xml documents. Its development started in 1996. During 10 years of research and development different new presentation, adaptation and user modeling methods and techniques have been added, turning AHA! into a general-purpose adaptive hypermedia platform. This paper presents an overview of the design and architecture of AHA!, with parts that have been published before and with recent additions like style adaptation and a new very flexible link annotation mechanism.Unlike other adaptive hypermedia systems, AHA! is not aimed at a single application area and does not prescribe a single fixed presentation style. Creating applications, defining the user models and the adaptive behavior are all done using graphical authoring tools. End-users are presented with what looks like a normal website, and need not be aware of the adaptation that goes on behind the scenes. Their browsing results in updates to a user model that is stored either in an xml file or a mySQL database, and that is thus also (in principle) available to other applications. Apart from providing a design overview this paper highlights two essential parts of AHA!: the reasoning / rule engine that translates the end-user's actions into user model updates, and the adaptive resource selection, which is used in the conditional inclusion of objects presentation technique and in the conditional link destinations navigation support technique.This paper is itself an adaptive hyperdocument. The order in which the different topics are visited determines the links that are presented and the contents of each (web)page. No matter how you browse through this paper you should end up with a very similar overall impression, and you should have seen all the information the paper contains. However, the actual contents of the pages and the actual link destinations do depend on your browsing order, so different users will not see exactly the same pages and links.