论文标题
Booklovers的视觉伴侣
Visual Companion for Booklovers
论文作者
论文摘要
发现新书的数量无数个人选择。无疑有两组Booklover:喜欢在线搜索,遵循其他人的最新读物或只是对系统的建议做出反应的人;那些喜欢在图书馆堆栈之间徘徊,在书店货架后面失去自己的人,或者只是躲在(联合国)有组织的书籍后面。根据一个人可能会属于哪个组,有两种截然不同的媒介能够告知他或她的选择:数字,可有效地在线获取信息,以及身体上的更具触觉追求,导致意外发现并促进了偶然性。我们如何才能将这些看似不同的媒介之间的差距弥合到可以扩大他们俩提供的好处的集成系统中?在本文中,我们介绍了BookVis应用程序,该应用程序使用与书籍相关的数据并生成个性化的可视化,以跟随用户追求新书。在这个新的重新设计版本中,该应用程序带来了关联的视觉连接,以支持易于检索的数字信息及其与物理书的关系的直观探索。 BookVis跟踪用户的阅读偏好,并生成数据词,作为随着时间的流逝而增长的个人品味的个人快照。还进行了可用性测试,并证明了该应用程序在读者口味中识别可区分模式的能力,这些模式可以进一步用于传达新的“架子浏览”迭代中的个人喜好。通过有效地补充用户的认知信息需求,同时仍支持浏览体验的自发性和享受,BookVis弥合了真实和在线领域之间的差距,并最大程度地提高了个性化移动视觉线索的参与。
An innumerable number of individual choices go into discovering a new book. There are unmistakably two groups of booklovers: those who like to search online, follow other people's latest readings, or simply react to a system's recommendations; and those who love to wander between library stacks, lose themselves behind bookstore shelves, or simply hide behind piles of (un)organized books. Depending on which group a person may fall into, there are two distinct and corresponding mediums that inform his or her choices: digital, that provides efficient retrieval of information online, and physical, a more tactile pursuit that leads to unexpected discoveries and promotes serendipity. How could we possibly bridge the gap between these seemingly disparate mediums into an integrated system that can amplify the benefits they both offer? In this paper, we present the BookVIS application, which uses book-related data and generates personalized visualizations to follow users in their quest for a new book. In this new redesigned version, the app brings associative visual connections to support intuitive exploration of easily retrieved digital information and its relationship with the physical book in hand. BookVIS keeps track of the user's reading preferences and generates a dataSelfie as an individual snapshot of a personal taste that grows over time. Usability testing has also been conducted and has demonstrated the app's ability to identify distinguishable patterns in readers' tastes that could be further used to communicate personal preferences in new "shelf-browsing" iterations. By efficiently supplementing the user's cognitive information needs while still supporting the spontaneity and enjoyment of the book browsing experience, BookVIS bridges the gap between real and online realms, and maximizes the engagement of personalized mobile visual clues.