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Data processing: presentation processing of document – operator i – Presentation processing of document – Layout

Reexamination Certificate

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C715S252000, C715S252000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06658623

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of Invention
This invention relates generally to electronic document reading Systems. In particular, this invention is directed to an electronic document reading system that suggests other related documents when displaying a first document.
2. Description of Related Art
Retrieving documents similar to a document identified by the user as being related is known as relevance feedback. Relevance feedback is described in “Introduction to Modern Information Retrieval”, G. Salton et al., McGraw Hill, (1983), incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Interfaces that support relevance feedback conventionally require explicit action on the part of the reader and do not spontaneously offer suggestions of relevant documents. Information exploration interfaces designed for window-based computing environments typically present search results for other relevant documents via lists in a separate window or by replacing the visible document with the search results. These systems are very intrusive and interrupt the reading process.
Hypertext interfaces display links to documents relevant to a source document either by providing a margin that contains the links or by embedding the links in the text of the source document in the manner pioneered by “Hyperties.” This system is described in “User Interface Design for the Hyperties Electronic Encyclopedia”, by Shneiderman,
Proceedings of Hypertext
'87, November 1987, Chapel Hill, N.C., incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. However, these links are static and are created along with the source document by the hypertext author. Some systems, such as Trellis, display links dynamically, but only from a fixed set of previously-defined links. Trellis is described in “Programmable Browsing Semantics and Trellis”, by R. Furuta et al.
Proceedings of Hypertext
'89, November 1989, Pittsburgh, Pa., ACM Press, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The HieNet System uses inter-node similarity measures to create hypertext links based on links previously created by the hypertext author. This system is described in “Hienet: A User-Centered Approach for Automatic Link Generation”, D. T. Chang,
Proceedings of Hypertext
'93, November 1993, Seattle, Wash., ACM Press, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. When the author creates a link from a document A to a document B, the system automatically adds links from all documents similar to document A to all documents similar to document B. Anchors for these automatically-generated links are represented by icons in the margin of the various documents. Clicking on an icon displays a pop-up menu that contains a list of possible destination documents that are ranked by relevance to the query. Again, this System relies on links previously created by the author.
Other conventional Systems relate to hypertext-like ways of displaying search results. HieNet displays automatic links in the margin, but anchors in the margin are not relevant to the content of the passage adjacent to the anchor. HieNet does not distinguish between document-document and passage-document links. Furthermore, HieNet does not indicate the number and nature of the documents reachable through the margin links.
Visualization of Information Retrieval System (hereinafter VOIR) is described in “Queries? Links? Is There a Difference?”,
Proceedings of CHI
'97, G. Golovinsky, March 1997, Atlanta, Ga., ACM Press and in “What the Query Told the Link: The Integration of Hypertext and Information Retrieval”,
Proceedings of Hypertext
'97, G. Golovinsky, April 1997, Southhampton, UK, ACM Press, each incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. VOIR is a mechanism that dynamically creates and resolves hypertext links with queries that are computed from the text surrounding a selected anchor. VOIR uses queries to retrieve sets of documents that are related to the passage containing the selected anchor. VOIR does not show the user links that have pre-established relationships. Rather, to submit a query and to establish a relationship, the user has to pause and select an anchor. VOIR was designed specifically to Support interactive information exploration, rather than to facilitate the reading process. Thus, VOIR's focus is supporting navigation between documents. The user is thus expected to devote much cognitive effort to browsing. Furthermore, VOIR does not permit the user to annotate or tag documents. VOIR also does not indicate which link was selected to generate a particular display.
A background information retrieval process called the Remembrance Agent (hereinafter RA) is described in “A Continuously Running Automated Information Retrieval System”, B. J. Rhodes et al.
Proceedings of The First International Conference on the Practical Application of Intelligent Agents in Multi-Agent Technology
, PAAM '96, April, 1997, London, UK, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. RA operates in an EMACS text window and suggests documents related to the last few lines of text typed by the user. RA is designed to search through a user's private data to suggest documents related to the text being typed. However, these suggestions are ephemeral and relate only to text that is currently being written. RA does not support reading tasks because it continuously replaces suggestions as the user edits the document.
QRL is a query-based information exploration interface that uses ink-like marks on text to specie boolean queries. This system is described in “Queries-R-Links: Graphical Markup for Text Navigation”, by G. Golovchinsky et al.,
Proceedings of INTERCHI
'93, April 1993, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, ACM Press, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Query terms are selected with rectangles. Lines connect the rectangles to represent boolean AND operators.
All of these systems require extensive user interaction to generate links to related documents or only support writing. An electronic document reading system is needed that passively and unobtrusively generates links to related documents to support reading.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This invention provides a method and a system for passively showing the reader related documents without interfering with the reading process.
The invention further provides intuitive support for reading by automatically detecting documents potentially of interest to the reader based on the reader's interaction with the source document being read. When people read text, they often make annotations to highlight interesting or controversial passages and terms. The presence or relative density of such marks and scribbles may be used as an indicator of the relative interest that the reader has in a particular passage. When a large body of documents related to the document being read is available, the reader may be interested in finding related documents as part of the reading process.
References to documents related to specific passages of interest to the user are placed in the source document's margins and references to documents similar overall to the source document are inserted as end notes. The system and method of this invention maintain the links once they have been identified to facilitate non-linear reading and skimming.
A user's interests are inferred from annotations made while reading the source document. Therefore, the system and method of this invention minimize cognitive overhead in two ways: 1) no expressive query is required to identify documents related to the source document; and 2) selectable links to the related documents are provided unobtrusively in the margins and at the end of the document, this is shown in
FIGS. 2 and 3
, respectively.
The system also introduces suggestions to the reader in a manner compatible with other interactions, rather than burdening the user with modal dialogues. Suggested documents are accessible by following the selectable links. However, the user does not have to act on a suggestion when it is made. Rather, the user

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