
Interactive Systems: Design, Specification, and Verification
1st Eurographics Workshop, Bocca di Magra, Italy, June 1994
Fabio Paterno(Editor)
Springer (Publisher)
Published on 28. August 1995
Book
Hardback
X, 447 pages
978-3-540-59480-2 (ISBN)
Description
Making systems easier to use implies increasingly complex management of communication between users and applications. An increasing part of the application program is devoted to the user interface. In order to manage this complexity, it is very important to have tools, notations, and methodologies that support the designer's work during the refinement process from specification to implementation.
The purpose of this proceedings of the first (1994) Eurographics workshop on this area is to review the state of the art. It compares the different existing approaches in order to identify the principal requirements and the most suitable notations and methods, and indicates the relevant results.
The purpose of this proceedings of the first (1994) Eurographics workshop on this area is to review the state of the art. It compares the different existing approaches in order to identify the principal requirements and the most suitable notations and methods, and indicates the relevant results.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Heidelberg
Germany
Publishing group
Springer Berlin
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
5 s/w Tabellen
5 black & white tables, biography
Dimensions
Height: 23.5 cm
Width: 15.5 cm
Weight
828 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-540-59480-2 (9783540594802)
DOI
10.1007/978-3-642-87115-3
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Fabio Paterno
Interactive Systems: Design, Specification, and Verification
1st Eurographics Workshop, Bocca di Magra, Italy, June 1994
E-Book
12/2012
Springer
€53.49
Available for download

Fabio Paterno
Interactive Systems: Design, Specification, and Verification
1st Eurographics Workshop, Bocca di Magra, Italy, June 1994
Book
02/2012
Springer
€53.49
Shipment within 7-9 days
Content
I Invited Presentations and Discussions.- Invited Presentations.- 1. History, Results, and Bibliography of the User Interface Design Environment (UIDE), an Early Model-Based System for User Interface Design and Implementation.- 2. Interactions with Advanced Graphical Interfaces and the Deployment of Latent Human Knowledge.- Working Group Discussions.- 3. Users.- 4. Role of Formalisms.- 5. Role of Development Environments.- II Modelling in Architectural Design of Interactive Systems.- 6. A Model-Based Approach to Presentation: A Continuum from Task Analysis to Prototype.- 7. Modeling and Analyzing Human-Computer Dialogues with Protocols.- 8. Bridging the Gap from Conceptual Design to Software Design.- 9. A Human-Computer Collaboration Paradigm for Bridging Design Conceptualization and Implementation.- 10. A Tool-Supported Approach to the Refinement of Interactive Systems.- 11. The BOSS System: Coupling Visual Programming with Model-Based Interface Design.- 12. A Model-Based User Interface Architecture: Enhancing a Runtime Environment with Declarative Knowledge.- 13. Object-Oriented Modelling and Specification for User Interface Design.- III Users, Tasks and Specification.- 14. Why Are Analogue Graphics and Natural Language Both Needed in HCI?.- 15. Modelling Interactive Systems and Providing Task Relevant Information.- 16. The Requirements Engineering of User Freedom.- 17. A Framework for Precise, Reusable Task Abstractions.- IV Approaches to Formal Specification of User Interfaces.- 18. Modelling Interaction Properties for Interactive Case Memories.- 19. LADA - A Logic for the Analysis of Distributed Actions.- 20. Folding Human Factors into Rigorous Development.- 21. Visual Representation of Formal Specification: An Application to Hierarchical Logical Input Devices.- 22. Grammar-Based Formal Specification for the Object-Oriented User Interface Development.- 23. Petri Net Based Design of User-Driven Interfaces Using the Interactive Cooperative Objects Formalism.- 24. User Centred System Modelling Using the Template Model.- 25. Understanding Direct Manipulation Interaction Algebraically.- 26. Using an Abstract Model for the Formal Specification of Interactive Graphic Systems.- List of Participants.