Principles of Mixed-Initiative User Interfaces
Eric Horvitz
Decision Theory & Adaptive Systems Group
Microsoft Research
Redmond, Washington 98052-6399
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Abstract:
Recent debate has centered on the relative promise of focusing
user-interface research on developing new metaphors and tools that
enhance users' abilities to directly manipulate objects versus
directing effort toward developing interface agents that provide
automation. In this paper, we review principles that show promise for
allowing engineers to enhance human-computer interaction through an
elegant coupling of automated services with direct manipulation. Key
ideas will be highlighted in terms of the Lookout system for
scheduling and meeting management.
Keywords: Human-computer interface, goal recognition, user modeling, intelligent agents, direct manipulation, probability, decision theory, user interface design.
In: Proceedings of CHI '99, ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, Pittsburgh, PA, May 1999. ACM Press. pp 159-166.
Author Email: horvitz@microsoft.com
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- E. Horvitz. Uncertainty, Action, and Interaction: In Pursuit of Mixed-Initiative Computing. Intelligent Systems, September 1999, IEEE Computer Society.
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- T. Paek and Eric Horvitz.
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- E. Horvitz, J. Breese, D. Heckerman, D. Hovel, and K. Rommelse.
The Lumiere Project: Bayesian User Modeling for Inferring
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Proceedings of the Fourteenth Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, July 1998.
- Lookout video (1998).
- Thematic review of several MSR projects in the AI/HCI realm (February 2001).
- Lookout system's brief debut on a Microsoft television commercial (January 1999).
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