Frameworks for enhancing temporal interface behaviour through software architectural design

The work reported in this thesis is concerned with understanding aspects of temporal behaviour. A large part of the thesis is based on analytical studies of temporal properties and interface and architectural concerns. The main areas covered include: i. analysing long-term human processes and the im...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ramduny-Ellis, Devina
Published: Staffordshire University 2002
Subjects:
005
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.272751
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-272751
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-2727512015-03-19T05:10:15ZFrameworks for enhancing temporal interface behaviour through software architectural designRamduny-Ellis, Devina2002The work reported in this thesis is concerned with understanding aspects of temporal behaviour. A large part of the thesis is based on analytical studies of temporal properties and interface and architectural concerns. The main areas covered include: i. analysing long-term human processes and the impact of interruptions and delays ii. investigating how infrastructures can be designed to support synchronous fast pace activity iii.design of the Getting-to-Know (GtK) experimental notification server The work is motivated by the failure of many collaborative systems to effectively manage the temporal behaviour at the interface level, as they often assume that the interaction is taking place over fast, reliable local area networks. However, the Web has challenged this assumption and users are faced with frequent network-related delays. The nature of cooperative work increases the importance of timing issues. Collaborative users require both rapid feedback of their own actions and timely feedthrough of other actions. Although it may appear that software architectures are about the internals of system design and not a necessary concern for the user interface, internal details do show up at the surface in non-functional aspects, such as timing. The focus of this work is on understanding the behavioural aspects and how they are influenced by the infrastructure. The thesis has contributed to several areas of research: (a)the study of long-term work processes generated a trigger analysis technique for task decomposition in HCI (b)the analysis of architectures was later applied to investigate architectural options for mobile interfaces (c)the framework for notification servers commenced a design vocabulary in CSCW for the implementation of notification services, with the aim of improving design (d)the impedance matching framework facilitate both goal-directed feedthrough and awareness In particular, (c) and (d) have been exercised in the development of the GtK separable notification server.005Q Science (General)Staffordshire Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.272751http://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/41655/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 005
Q Science (General)
spellingShingle 005
Q Science (General)
Ramduny-Ellis, Devina
Frameworks for enhancing temporal interface behaviour through software architectural design
description The work reported in this thesis is concerned with understanding aspects of temporal behaviour. A large part of the thesis is based on analytical studies of temporal properties and interface and architectural concerns. The main areas covered include: i. analysing long-term human processes and the impact of interruptions and delays ii. investigating how infrastructures can be designed to support synchronous fast pace activity iii.design of the Getting-to-Know (GtK) experimental notification server The work is motivated by the failure of many collaborative systems to effectively manage the temporal behaviour at the interface level, as they often assume that the interaction is taking place over fast, reliable local area networks. However, the Web has challenged this assumption and users are faced with frequent network-related delays. The nature of cooperative work increases the importance of timing issues. Collaborative users require both rapid feedback of their own actions and timely feedthrough of other actions. Although it may appear that software architectures are about the internals of system design and not a necessary concern for the user interface, internal details do show up at the surface in non-functional aspects, such as timing. The focus of this work is on understanding the behavioural aspects and how they are influenced by the infrastructure. The thesis has contributed to several areas of research: (a)the study of long-term work processes generated a trigger analysis technique for task decomposition in HCI (b)the analysis of architectures was later applied to investigate architectural options for mobile interfaces (c)the framework for notification servers commenced a design vocabulary in CSCW for the implementation of notification services, with the aim of improving design (d)the impedance matching framework facilitate both goal-directed feedthrough and awareness In particular, (c) and (d) have been exercised in the development of the GtK separable notification server.
author Ramduny-Ellis, Devina
author_facet Ramduny-Ellis, Devina
author_sort Ramduny-Ellis, Devina
title Frameworks for enhancing temporal interface behaviour through software architectural design
title_short Frameworks for enhancing temporal interface behaviour through software architectural design
title_full Frameworks for enhancing temporal interface behaviour through software architectural design
title_fullStr Frameworks for enhancing temporal interface behaviour through software architectural design
title_full_unstemmed Frameworks for enhancing temporal interface behaviour through software architectural design
title_sort frameworks for enhancing temporal interface behaviour through software architectural design
publisher Staffordshire University
publishDate 2002
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.272751
work_keys_str_mv AT ramdunyellisdevina frameworksforenhancingtemporalinterfacebehaviourthroughsoftwarearchitecturaldesign
_version_ 1716740022723411968