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E-book
Author Wilson, Max L.

Title Search user interface design / Max L. Wilson
Published Cham, Switzerland : Springer, ©2012
Online access available from:
Synthesis Digital Library    View Resource Record  

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Description 1 online resource (xviii, 125 pages) : illustrations (chiefly color)
Series Synthesis lectures on information concepts, retrieval, and services, 1947-9468 ; #20
Synthesis lectures on information concepts, retrieval, and services ; #20. 1947-9468
Contents Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Figure credits
1. Introduction -- 1.1 From information retrieval to exploratory search -- 1.2 Our everyday experiences of search -- 1.3 A framework for thinking about search features -- 1.4 Structure of book -- 1.4.1 Key terms
2. Searcher-computer interaction -- 2.1 Related disciplines in SUI design -- 2.2 How we should think about SUIs -- 2.2.1 Getting it right, for the user -- 2.2.2 The effects of the technology -- 2.3 User interface design principles -- 2.4 Summary
3. Early search user interfaces -- 3.1 A brief early history of SUIs -- 3.1.1 Conversation and dialogue -- 3.1.2 Browsing -- 3.1.3 Form filling -- 3.1.4 Boolean searching -- 3.1.5 Informational advances -- 3.2 The onset of modern SUIs -- 3.3 Summary
4. Modern search user interfaces -- 4.1 Input features -- 4.1.1 The search box -- 4.1.2 Adding metadata -- 4.2 Control features -- 4.2.1 Interactive query changes -- 4.2.2 Corrections -- 4.2.3 Sorting -- 4.2.4 Filters -- 4.2.5 Grouping -- 4.3 Informational features -- 4.3.1 Standard results lists -- 4.3.2 2D displays of results -- 4.3.3 3D displays of results -- 4.3.4 Additional informational features -- 4.4 Personalisable features -- 4.4.1 Current-search personalisation -- 4.4.2 Persistent search personalisation -- 4.4.3 Socially affected personalisation -- 4.5 Summary
5. Experimental search user interfaces -- 5.1 Collaborative search -- 5.2 Real-time search and social media -- 5.3 Exploratory search and sensemaking -- 5.4 Mobile search -- 5.5 Re-finding, desktop and personal search -- 5.6 Summary
6. Evaluating search user interfaces -- 6.1 IR vs. empirical vs. analytical approaches -- 6.1.1 IR evaluation -- 6.1.2 Empirical user studies -- 6.1.3 Analytical approaches -- 6.2 Choosing an approach -- 6.3 Summary
7. Conclusions -- 7.1 Revisiting how we think about SUIs -- 7.2 Innovating and evaluating SUIs -- 7.3 Summary of design recommendations -- 7.4 Concluding remarks -- Bibliography -- Author's biography
Summary Search User Interfaces (SUIs) represent the gateway between people who have a task to complete, and the repositories of information and data stored around the world. Not surprisingly, therefore, there are many communities who have a vested interest in the way SUIs are designed. There are people who study how humans search for information, and people who study how humans use computers. There are people who study good user interface design, and people who design aesthetically pleasing user interfaces. There are also people who curate and manage valuable information resources, and people who design effective algorithms to retrieve results from them. While it would be easy for one community to reject another for their limited ability to design a good SUI, the truth is that they all can, and they all have made valuable contributions. Fundamentally, therefore, we must accept that designing a great SUI means leveraging the knowledge and skills from all of these communities. The aim of this book is to at least acknowledge, if not integrate, all of these perspectives to bring the reader into a multidisciplinary mindset for how we should think about SUI design. Further, this book aims to provide the reader with a framework for thinking about how different innovations each contribute to the overall design of a SUI. With this framework and a multidisciplinary perspective in hand, the book then continues by reviewing: early, successful, established, and experimental concepts for SUI design. The book then concludes by discussing how we can analyse and evaluate the ongoing developments in SUI design, as this multidisciplinary area of research moves forwards. Finally, in reviewing these many SUIs and SUI features, the book finishes by extracting a series of 20 SUI design recommendations that are listed in the conclusions
Analysis search
information seeking
user interfaces
user experience
interaction
Notes Part of: Synthesis digital library of engineering and computer science
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 103-124)
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (Morgan & Claypool, viewed Dec. 7, 2011)
Subject Search engines -- Design
User interfaces (Computer systems) -- Design
COMPUTERS -- Online Services -- Resource Directories.
COMPUTERS -- System Administration -- Storage & Retrieval.
User interfaces (Computer systems) -- Design
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781608456901
1608456900
1608456897
9781608456895
9783031022777
3031022777