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Theory and Application of Diagrams : First International Conference, Diagrams 2000, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK, September 1-3, 2000 Proceedings / edited by Michael Anderson, Peter Cheng, Volker Haarslev.

SpringerLink Books Lecture Notes In Computer Science (LNCS) (1997-2024) Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Anderson, Michael, editor.
Cheng, Peter, 1963- editor.
Haarslev, Volker, 1955- editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Series:
Computer Science (Springer-11645)
Lecture notes in computer science. Lecture notes in artificial intelligence ; 1889.
Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence ; 1889
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Artificial intelligence.
Computers.
Software engineering.
Computer programming.
Computer science--Mathematics.
Computer science.
User interfaces (Computer systems).
Artificial Intelligence.
Theory of Computation.
Software Engineering/Programming and Operating Systems.
Programming Techniques.
Discrete Mathematics in Computer Science.
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
Local Subjects:
Artificial Intelligence.
Theory of Computation.
Software Engineering/Programming and Operating Systems.
Programming Techniques.
Discrete Mathematics in Computer Science.
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (XII, 508 pages).
Edition:
First edition 2000.
Contained In:
Springer eBooks
Place of Publication:
Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2000.
System Details:
text file PDF
Summary:
Diagrams 2000 is dedicated to the memory of Jon Barwise. Diagrams 2000 was the ?rst event in a new interdisciplinary conference series on the Theory and Application of Diagrams. It was held at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, September 1-3, 2000. Driven by the pervasiveness of diagrams in human communication and by the increasing availability of graphical environments in computerized work, the study of diagrammatic notations is emerging as a research ?eld in its own right. This development has simultaneously taken place in several scienti?c disciplines, including, amongst others: cognitive science, arti?cial intelligence, and computer science. Consequently, a number of di?erent workshop series on this topic have been successfully organized during the last few years: Thinking with Diagrams, Theory of Visual Languages, Reasoning with Diagrammatic Representations, and Formalizing Reasoning with Visual and Diagrammatic Representations. Diagrams are simultaneously complex cognitive phenonema and sophis- cated computational artifacts. So, to be successful and relevant the study of diagrams must as a whole be interdisciplinary in nature. Thus, the workshop series mentioned above decided to merge into Diagrams 2000, as the single - terdisciplinary conference for this exciting new ?eld. It is intended that Diagrams 2000 should become the premier international conference series in this area and provide a forum with su?cient breadth of scope to encompass researchers from all academic areas who are studying the nature of diagrammatic representations and their use by humans and in machines.
Contents:
Invited Talks
Invited Talk: Representations to Mediate Geospatial Collaborative Reasoning: A Cognitive-Semiotic Perspective
Invited Talk: Jon Barwise: A Heterogeneous Appreciation
Tutorial 1 - Formal Approaches to Diagrams
Tutorial 1: Formal Approaches to Visual Language Specification and Understanding
Tutorial 2 - Cognitive Approach to Diagrams
Tutorial 2a: Cognitive History of Science: The Roles of Diagrammatic Representations in Discovery and Modeling Discovery
Tutorial 2b: Cognitive (Production System) Modelling of How an Expert Uses a Cartesian Graph
Tutorial 2c: The Coordination of External Representations and Internal Mental Representations in Display-Based Cognitive Tasks
Logic and Diagrams
Positive Semantics of Projections in Venn-Euler Diagrams
On the Completeness and Expressiveness of Spider Diagram Systems
Non-standard Logics for Diagram Interpretation
Reviving the Iconicity of Beta Graphs
Constraint Matching for Diagram Design: Qualitative Visual Languages
Picking Knots from Trees
Theoretical Concerns about Diagrams
Differentiating Diagrams: A New Approach
Logical Systems and Formality
Distinctions with Differences: Comparing Criteria for Distinguishing Diagrammatic from Sentential Systems
Cognition and Diagrams
How People Extract Information from Graphs: Evidence from a Sentence-Graph Verification Paradigm
Restricted Focus Viewer: A Tool for Tracking Visual Attention
Communicating Dynamic Behaviors: Are Interactive Multimedia Presentations Better than Static Mixed-Mode Presentations?
Capacity Limits in Diagrammatic Reasoning
Human Communication with Diagrams
Recording the Future: Some Diagrammatic Aspects of Time Management
Lines, Blobs, Crosses and Arrows: Diagrammatic Communication with Schematic Figures
Animated Diagrams: An Investigation into the Cognitive Effects of Using Animation to Illustrate Dynamic Processes
A Comparison of Graphics and Speech in a Task-Oriented Interaction
Diagramming Aesthetics: Modernism and Architecture in the 21st Century
Diagrammatic Reasoning/Proof Systems
JVenn: A Visual Reasoning System with Diagrams and Sentences
A Proposal for Automating Diagrammatic Reasoning in Continuous Domains
Playing with Diagrams
The Use of Intermediate Graphical Constructions in Problem Solving with Dynamic, Pixel-Level Diagrams
Diagrams for Systems, Systems for Diagrams
Treatment of Diagrams in Document Image Analysis
Universal Arrow Foundations for Visual Modeling
Diagrammatic Acquisition of Functional Knowledge for Product Configuration Systems with the Unified Modeling Language
Evaluating the Intelligibility of Diagrammatic Languages Used in the Specification of Software
Executing Diagram Sequences
MetaBuilder: The Diagrammer's Diagrammer
Diagrammatic Control of Diagrammatic Structure Generation
Two-Dimensional Positioning as Visual Thinking
Reordering the Reorderable Matrix as an Algorithmic Problem
Posters
Clouds: A Module for Automatic Learning of Concept Maps
A Diagrammatic Notation for Interval Algebra
Animation of Diagrams: An Aid to Learning?
Diagrams as Components of Multimedia Discourse: A Semiotic Approach
Formalising the Essence of Diagrammatic Syntax
Using Grids in Maps
Case Analysis in Euclidean Geometry: An Overview
Bar Charts Recognition Using Hough Based Syntactic Segmentation
Experimenting with Aesthetics-Based Graph Layout.
Other Format:
Printed edition:
ISBN:
978-3-540-44590-6
9783540445906
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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