Speed-Dependent Automatic Zooming (SDAZ) is an exciting new navigation technique that couples the user's rate of motion through an information space with the zoom level. The faster a user scrolls in the document, the 'higher' they fly above the work surface. At present, there are few guidelines for the calibration of SDAZ. Previous work by Igarashi & Hinckley (2000) and Cockburn & Savage (2003) fails to give values for predefined constants governing their automatic zooming behaviour. The absence of formal guidelines means that SDAZ implementers are forced to adjust the properties of the automatic zooming by trial and error. This thesis aids calibration by identifying the low-level components of SDAZ. Base calibration settings for these c...
Zooming proposed by Igarashi and Hinckley is a powerful tool for document navigation on mobile devic...
Traditional digital document navigation found in Acrobat and HTML document readers performs poorly w...
Traditional digital document navigation found in Acrobat and HTML document readers performs poorly w...
Speed Dependent Automatic Zooming (SDAZ) has already been shown to be an effective navigation techni...
Speed-dependent automatic zooming (SDAZ) has been proposed for standard desktop displays as a means ...
Speed-dependent automatic zooming (SDAZ) has been proposed for standard desktop displays as a means ...
Speed Dependent Automatic Zooming (SDAZ) has already been shown to be an effective navigation techn...
Speed-dependent automatic zooming couples the user’s rate of motion through an information space wi...
Speed-dependent automatic zooming (SDAZ) interfaces allow rapid navigation through large visual inf...
Today’s computer environment requires frequent browsing of documents too large for the viewing windo...
We provide a dynamic systems interpretation of the coupling of internal states involved in speed-dep...
Abstract: Speed-dependent automatic zooming (SDAZ) has been proposed for standard desktop displays ...
We provide a dynamic systems interpretation of the coupling of internal states involved in speed-dep...
Maps are currently the most common application domain for ZUIs. Standard techniques for controlling ...
Maps are currently the most common application domain for ZUIs. Standard techniques for controlling ...
Zooming proposed by Igarashi and Hinckley is a powerful tool for document navigation on mobile devic...
Traditional digital document navigation found in Acrobat and HTML document readers performs poorly w...
Traditional digital document navigation found in Acrobat and HTML document readers performs poorly w...
Speed Dependent Automatic Zooming (SDAZ) has already been shown to be an effective navigation techni...
Speed-dependent automatic zooming (SDAZ) has been proposed for standard desktop displays as a means ...
Speed-dependent automatic zooming (SDAZ) has been proposed for standard desktop displays as a means ...
Speed Dependent Automatic Zooming (SDAZ) has already been shown to be an effective navigation techn...
Speed-dependent automatic zooming couples the user’s rate of motion through an information space wi...
Speed-dependent automatic zooming (SDAZ) interfaces allow rapid navigation through large visual inf...
Today’s computer environment requires frequent browsing of documents too large for the viewing windo...
We provide a dynamic systems interpretation of the coupling of internal states involved in speed-dep...
Abstract: Speed-dependent automatic zooming (SDAZ) has been proposed for standard desktop displays ...
We provide a dynamic systems interpretation of the coupling of internal states involved in speed-dep...
Maps are currently the most common application domain for ZUIs. Standard techniques for controlling ...
Maps are currently the most common application domain for ZUIs. Standard techniques for controlling ...
Zooming proposed by Igarashi and Hinckley is a powerful tool for document navigation on mobile devic...
Traditional digital document navigation found in Acrobat and HTML document readers performs poorly w...
Traditional digital document navigation found in Acrobat and HTML document readers performs poorly w...