Publikationen
2017 | |
11. | Kawa Nazemi; Dirk Burkhardt; Arjan Kuijper Analyzing the Information Search Behavior and Intentions in Visual Information Systems Artikel In: Journal of Computer Science Technology Updates, Bd. 4, 2017. Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: Human Factors, Human-centered user interfaces, Human-computer interaction (HCI), Information visualization, User behavior, User Interactions, User Interface, User modeling, User-centered design, Visual analytics @article{Nazemi2017, Visual information search systems support different search approaches such as targeted, exploratory or analytical search. Those visual systems deal with the challenge of composing optimal initial result visualization sets that face the search intention and respond to the search behavior of users. The diversity of these kinds of search tasks require different sets of visual layouts and functionalities, e.g. to filter, thrill-down or even analyze concrete data properties. This paper describes a new approach to calculate the probability towards the three mentioned search intentions, derived from users’ behavior. The implementation is realized as a web-service, which is included in a visual environment that is designed to enable various search strategies based on heterogeneous data sources. In fact, based on an entered search query our developed search intention analysis web-service calculates the most probable search task, and our visualization system initially shows the optimal result set of visualizations to solve the task. The main contribution of this paper is a probability-based approach to derive the users’ search intentions based on the search behavior enhanced by the application to a visual system. |
2014 | |
10. | Kawa Nazemi Adaptive Semantics Visualization Promotionsarbeit Technische Universität Darmstadt, 2014, (Reprint by Eugraphics Association (EG)). Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: Adaptive Information Visualization, Adaptive User Interfaces, Adaptive Visualization, Computer Based Learning, Data Analytics, E-Learning, Exploratory learning, Human Factors, Human-centered user interfaces, Human-computer interaction (HCI), Information visualization, Intelligent Systems, Interaction analysis, Interaction Design, Ontology visualization, personalization, Policy modeling, reference model, Semantic data modeling, Semantic visualization, Semantic web, Semantics visualization, User behavior, User Interactions, User Interface, User modeling, User-centered design, Visual analytics @phdthesis{Nazemi2014f, Human access to the increasing amount of information and data plays an essential role for the professional level and also for everyday life. While information visualization has developed new and remarkable ways for visualizing data and enabling the exploration process, adaptive systems focus on users' behavior to tailor information for supporting the information acquisition process. Recent research on adaptive visualization shows promising ways of synthesizing these two complementary approaches and make use of the surpluses of both disciplines. The emerged methods and systems aim to increase the performance, acceptance, and user experience of graphical data representations for a broad range of users. Although the evaluation results of the recently proposed systems are promising, some important aspects of information visualization are not considered in the adaptation process. The visual adaptation is commonly limited to change either visual parameters or replace visualizations entirely. Further, no existing approach adapts the visualization based on data and user characteristics. Other limitations of existing approaches include the fact that the visualizations require training by experts in the field. In this thesis, we introduce a novel model for adaptive visualization. In contrast to existing approaches, we have focused our investigation on the potentials of information visualization for adaptation. Our reference model for visual adaptation not only considers the entire transformation, from data to visual representation, but also enhances it to meet the requirements for visual adaptation. Our model adapts different visual layers that were identified based on various models and studies on human visual perception and information processing. In its adaptation process, our conceptual model considers the impact of both data and user on visualization adaptation. We investigate different approaches and models and their effects on system adaptation to gather implicit information about users and their behavior. These are than transformed and applied to affect the visual representation and model human interaction behavior with visualizations and data to achieve a more appropriate visual adaptation. Our enhanced user model further makes use of the semantic hierarchy to enable a domain-independent adaptation. To face the problem of a system that requires to be trained by experts, we introduce the canonical user model that models the average usage behavior with the visualization environment. Our approach learns from the behavior of the average user to adapt the different visual layers and transformation steps. This approach is further enhanced with similarity and deviation analysis for individual users to determine similar behavior on an individual level and identify differing behavior from the canonical model. Users with similar behavior get similar visualization and data recommendations, while behavioral anomalies lead to a lower level of adaptation. Our model includes a set of various visual layouts that can be used to compose a multi-visualization interface, a sort of "visualization cockpit". This model facilitates various visual layouts to provide different perspectives and enhance the ability to solve difficult and exploratory search challenges. Data from different data-sources can be visualized and compared in a visual manner. These different visual perspectives on data can be chosen by users or can be automatically selected by the system. This thesis further introduces the implementation of our model that includes additional approaches for an efficient adaptation of visualizations as proof of feasibility. We further conduct a comprehensive user study that aims to prove the benefits of our model and underscore limitations for future work. The user study with overall 53 participants focuses with its four conditions on our enhanced reference model to evaluate the adaptation effects of the different visual layers. |
9. | Kawa Nazemi Adaptive Semantics Visualization Promotionsarbeit Technische Universität Darmstadt, 2014, (Department of Computer Science. Supervised by Dieter W. Fellner.). Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: Adaptive Information Visualization, Adaptive User Interfaces, Computer Based Learning, Data Analytics, eGovernance, Exploratory learning, Human Factors, Human-centered user interfaces, Human-computer interaction (HCI), Information visualization, Intelligent Systems, Interaction Design, Ontology visualization, personalization, Policy modeling, Semantic data modeling, Semantic visualization, Semantic web, User behavior, User Interactions, User Interface, User modeling, User-centered design, Visual analytics @phdthesis{Nazemi2014g, Human access to the increasing amount of information and data plays an essential role for the professional level and also for everyday life. While information visualization has developed new and remarkable ways for visualizing data and enabling the exploration process, adaptive systems focus on users’ behavior to tailor information for supporting the information acquisition process. Recent research on adaptive visualization shows promising ways of synthesizing these two complementary approaches and make use of the surpluses of both disciplines. The emerged methods and systems aim to increase the performance, acceptance, and user experience of graphical data representations for a broad range of users. Although the evaluation results of the recently proposed systems are promising, some important aspects of information visualization are not considered in the adaptation process. The visual adaptation is commonly limited to change either visual parameters or replace visualizations entirely. Further, no existing approach adapts the visualization based on data and user characteristics. Other limitations of existing approaches include the fact that the visualizations require training by experts in the field. In this thesis, we introduce a novel model for adaptive visualization. In contrast to existing approaches, we have focused our investigation on the potentials of information visualization for adaptation. Our reference model for visual adaptation not only considers the entire transformation, from data to visual representation, but also enhances it to meet the requirements for visual adaptation. Our model adapts different visual layers that were identified based on various models and studies on human visual perception and information processing. In its adaptation process, our conceptual model considers the impact of both data and user on visualization adaptation. We investigate different approaches and models and their effects on system adaptation to gather implicit information about users and their behavior. These are than transformed and applied to affect the visual representation and model human interaction behavior with visualizations and data to achieve a more appropriate visual adaptation. Our enhanced user model further makes use of the semantic hierarchy to enable a domain-independent adaptation. To face the problem of a system that requires to be trained by experts, we introduce the canonical user model that models the average usage behavior with the visualization environment. Our approach learns from the behavior of the average user to adapt the different visual layers and transformation steps. This approach is further enhanced with similarity and deviation analysis for individual users to determine similar behavior on an individual level and identify differing behavior from the canonical model. Users with similar behavior get similar visualization and data recommendations, while behavioral anomalies lead to a lower level of adaptation. Our model includes a set of various visual layouts that can be used to compose a multi-visualization interface, a sort of "‘visualization cockpit"’. This model facilitates various visual layouts to provide different perspectives and enhance the ability to solve difficult and exploratory search challenges. Data from different data-sources can be visualized and compared in a visual manner. These different visual perspectives on data can be chosen by users or can be automatically selected by the system. This thesis further introduces the implementation of our model that includes additional approaches for an efficient adaptation of visualizations as proof of feasibility. We further conduct a comprehensive user study that aims to prove the benefits of our model and underscore limitations for future work. The user study with overall 53 participants focuses with its four conditions on our enhanced reference model to evaluate the adaptation effects of the different visual layers. |
8. | Kawa Nazemi; Wilhelm Retz; Jörn Kohlhammer; Arjan Kuijper User Similarity and Deviation Analysis for Adaptive Visualizations Konferenzbeitrag In: Sakae Yamamoto (Hrsg.): International Conference on Human Interface and the Management of Information (HMI 2014). Human Interface and the Management of Information. Information and Knowledge Design and Evaluation., S. 64–75, Springer International Publishing, Cham, 2014, ISBN: 978-3-319-07731-7. Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: Adaptive Information Visualization, Adaptive User Interfaces, Adaptive Visualization, Data Analytics, reference model, Semantic visualization, Semantics visualization, User behavior, User Interactions, User Interface, User modeling, User-centered design, Visual analytics @inproceedings{Nazemi2014e, Adaptive visualizations support users in information acquisition and exploration and therewith in human access of data. Their adaptation effect is often based on approaches that require the training by an expert. Further the effects often aims to support just the individual aptitudes. This paper introduces an approach for modeling a canonical user that makes the predefined training-files dispensable and enables an adaptation of visualizations for the majority of users. With the introduced user deviation algorithm, the behavior of individuals can be compared to the average user behavior represented in the canonical user model to identify behavioral anomalies. The further introduced similarity measurements allow to cluster similar deviated behavioral patterns as groups and provide them effective visual adaptations. |
7. | Kawa Nazemi; Dirk Burkhardt; Reimond Retz; Arjan Kuijper; Jörn Kohlhammer Adaptive Visualization of Linked-Data Konferenzbeitrag In: George Bebis; Richard Boyle; Bahram Parvin; Darko Koracin; Ryan McMahan; Jason Jerald; Hui Zhang; Steven M Drucker; Chandra Kambhamettu; Maha El Choubassi; Zhigang Deng; Mark Carlson (Hrsg.): Proceedings of International Symposium on Visual Computing (ISVC 2014). Advances in Visual Computing., S. 872–883, Springer International Publishing, Cham, 2014, ISBN: 978-3-319-14364-4. Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: Adaptive Information Visualization, Adaptive User Interfaces, Adaptive Visualization, Data Analytics, Human Factors, Human-centered user interfaces, Human-computer interaction (HCI), Information visualization, Intelligent Systems, Interaction analysis, Interaction Design, personalization, reference model, Semantic visualization, Semantic web, User behavior, User modeling, User-centered design, Visual analytics @inproceedings{Nazemi2014b, Adaptive visualizations reduces the required cognitive effort to comprehend interactive visual pictures and amplify cognition. Although the research on adaptive visualizations grew in the last years, the existing approaches do not consider the transformation pipeline from data to visual representation for a more efficient and effective adaptation. Further todays systems commonly require an initial training by experts from the field and are limited to adaptation based either on user behavior or on data characteristics. A combination of both is not proposed to our knowledge. This paper introduces an enhanced instantiation of our previously proposed model that combines both: involving different influencing factors for and adapting various levels of visual peculiarities, on content, visual layout, visual presentation, and visual interface. Based on data type and users’ behavior, our system adapts a set of applicable visualization types. Moreover, retinal variables of each visualization type are adapted to meet individual or canonical requirements on both, data types and users’ behavior. Our system does not require an initial expert modeling. |
6. | Kawa Nazemi; Dirk Burkhardt; Wilhelm Retz; Jörn Kohlhammer Adaptive Visualization of Social Media Data for Policy Modeling Konferenzbeitrag In: George Bebis; Richard Boyle; Bahram Parvin; Darko Koracin; Ryan McMahan; Jason Jerald; Hui Zhang; Steven M Drucker; Chandra Kambhamettu; Maha El Choubassi; Zhigang Deng; Mark Carlson (Hrsg.): Proceeding of the International Symposium on Visual Computing (ISVC 2014). Advances in Visual Computing., S. 333–344, Springer International Publishing, Cham, 2014, ISBN: 978-3-319-14249-4. Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: Adaptive Information Visualization, Adaptive User Interfaces, Adaptive Visualization, Data Analytics, Human Factors, Human-centered user interfaces, Human-computer interaction (HCI), Information visualization, Intelligent Systems, Interaction analysis, Interaction Design, personalization, Semantic visualization, Semantic web, User behavior, User Interactions, User Interface, User modeling, User-centered design, Visual analytics @inproceedings{Nazemi2014g, The visual analysis of social media data emerged a huge number of interactive visual representations that use different characteristics of the data to enable the process of information acquisition. The social data are used in the domain of policy modeling to gather information about citizens' demands, opinions, and requirements and help to decide about political policies. Although existing systems already provide a huge number of visual analysis tools, the search and exploration paradigm is not really clear. Furthermore, the systems commonly do not provide any kind of human centered adaptation for the different stakeholders involved in the policy making process. In this paper, we introduce a novel approach that investigates the exploration and search paradigm from two different perspectives and enables a visual adaptation to support the exploration and analysis process. |
5. | Kawa Nazemi; Arjan Kuijper; Marco Hutter; Jörn Kohlhammer; Dieter W. Fellner Measuring Context Relevance for Adaptive Semantics Visualizations Konferenzbeitrag In: Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Knowledge Technologies and Data-driven Business, S. 14:1–14:8, ACM, Graz, Austria, 2014, ISBN: 978-1-4503-2769-5, (Honourable Mention). Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: Adaptive Information Visualization, Adaptive User Interfaces, Adaptive Visualization, Data Analytics, data weighting, Information retrieval, semantic processing, Semantic web, Semantics visualization, User Interface, User modeling, Visual analytics @inproceedings{Nazemi:2014:MCR:2637748.2638416, Semantics visualizations enable the acquisition of information to amplify the acquisition of knowledge. The dramatic increase of semantics in form of Linked Data and Linked-Open Data yield search databases that allow to visualize the entire context of search results. The visualization of this semantic context enables one to gather more information at once, but the complex structures may as well confuse and frustrate users. To overcome the problems, adaptive visualizations already provide some useful methods to adapt the visualization on users' demands and skills. Although these methods are very promising, these systems do not investigate the relevance of semantic neighboring entities that commonly build most information value. We introduce two new measurements for the relevance of neighboring entities: The Inverse Instance Frequency allows weighting the relevance of semantic concepts based on the number of their instances. The Direct Relation Frequency inverse Relations Frequency measures the relevance of neighboring instances by the type of semantic relations. Both measurements provide a weighting of neighboring entities of a selected semantic instance, and enable an adaptation of retinal variables for the visualized graph. The algorithms can easily be integrated into adaptive visualizations and enhance them with the relevance measurement of neighboring semantic entities. We give a detailed description of the algorithms to enable a replication for the adaptive and semantics visualization community. With our method, one can now easily derive the relevance of neighboring semantic entities of selected instances, and thus gain more information at once, without confusing and frustrating users. |
4. | Dirk Burkhardt; Kawa Nazemi; Jose Daniel Encarnacao; Wilhelm Retz; Jörn Kohlhammer Visualization Adaptation Based on Environmental Influencing Factors Konferenzbeitrag In: Masaaki Kurosu (Hrsg.): International Conference on Human-Computer (HCI 2014). Human-Computer Interaction. Theories, Methods, and Tools., S. 411–422, Springer International Publishing, Cham, 2014, ISBN: 978-3-319-07233-3. Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: Adaptive Information Visualization, Adaptive User Interfaces, User modeling, User-centered design, Visual analytics @inproceedings{Burkhardt2014f, Working effectively with computer-based devices is challenging, especially under mobile conditions, due to the various environmental influences. In this paper a visualization adaptation approach is described, to support the user under discriminatory environmental conditions. For this purpose, a context model for environmental influencing factors is being defined. Based on this context model, an approach to adapt visualizations in regards of certain environmental influences is being evolved, such as the light intensity, air quality, or heavy vibrations. |
2011 | |
3. | Kawa Nazemi; Dirk Burkhardt; Matthias Breyer; Arjan Kuijper Modeling Users for Adaptive Semantics Visualizations Konferenzbeitrag In: Constantine Stephanidis (Hrsg.): International Conference on Universal Access in Human-Computer Interaction. Universal Access in Human-Computer Interaction. Users Diversity., S. 88–97, Springer Berlin Heidelberg, Berlin, Heidelberg, 2011, ISBN: 978-3-642-21663-3. Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: Adaptive Information Visualization, Adaptive User Interfaces, Adaptive Visualization, Intelligent Systems, Interaction analysis, Interaction Design, User modeling @inproceedings{Nazemi2011d, The automatic adaptation of information visualization systems to the requirements of users plays a key-role in today's research. Different approaches from both disciplines try to face this phenomenon. The modeling of user is an essential part of a user-centered adaptation of visualization. In this paper we introduce a new approach for modeling users especially for semantic visualization systems. The approach consists of a three dimensional model, where semantic data, user and visualization are set in relation in different abstraction layer. |
2010 | |
2. | Kawa Nazemi; Christian Stab; Dieter W. Fellner IEEE International Conference on Intelligent Computing and Intelligent Systems, IEEE IEEE Press, 2010, ISBN: 978-1-4244-6582-8. Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: Adaptive User Interfaces, Interaction analysis, Statistics, User behavior, User modeling @conference{C35-P-21676, Predictive statistical models are used in the area of adaptive user interfaces to model user behavior and to infer user information from interaction events in an implicit and non-intrusive way. This information constitutes the basis for tailoring the user interface to the needs of the individual user. Consequently, the user analysis process should model the user with information, which can be used in various systems to recognize user activities, intentions and roles to accomplish an adequate adaptation to the given user and his current task. In this paper we present the improved prediction algorithm KO*/19, which is able to recognize, beside interaction predictions, behavioral patterns for recognizing user activities. By means of this extension, the evaluation shows that the KO*/19-Algorithm improves the Mean Prediction Rank more than 19% compared to other well-established prediction algorithms. |
1. | Kawa Nazemi; Christian Stab; Dieter W. Fellner Interaction Analysis for Adaptive User Interfaces Konferenz Advanced Intelligent Computing Theories and Applications. International Conference on Intelligent Computing., LNCS 6215 Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, 2010, ISBN: 978-3-642-14921-4. Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: Adaptive Information Visualization, Adaptive User Interfaces, Interaction analysis, Probabilistic models, User modeling @conference{C35-P-21532, Adaptive User Interfaces are able to facilitate the handling of computer systems through the automatic adaptation to users' needs and preferences. For the realization of these systems, information about the individual user is needed. This user information can be extracted from user events by applying analytical methods without the active information input by the user. In this paper we introduce a reusable interaction analysis system based on probabilistic methods that predicts user interactions, recognizes user activities and detects user preferences on different levels of abstraction. The evaluation reveals that the prediction quality of the developed algorithm outperforms the quality of other established prediction methods. |