Structural analysis of hypertexts: Identifying hierarchies and useful metrics
RA Botafogo, E Rivlin, B Shneiderman - ACM Transactions on …, 1992 - dl.acm.org
RA Botafogo, E Rivlin, B Shneiderman
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS), 1992•dl.acm.orgHypertext users often suffer from the “lost in hyperspace” problem: disorientation from too
many jumps while traversing a complex network. One solution to this problem is improved
authoring to create more comprehensible structures. This paper proposes several authoring
tools, based on hypertext structure analysis. In many hypertext systems authors are
encouraged to create hierarchical structures, but when writing, the hierarchy is lost because
of the inclusion of cross-reference links. The first part of this paper looks at ways of …
many jumps while traversing a complex network. One solution to this problem is improved
authoring to create more comprehensible structures. This paper proposes several authoring
tools, based on hypertext structure analysis. In many hypertext systems authors are
encouraged to create hierarchical structures, but when writing, the hierarchy is lost because
of the inclusion of cross-reference links. The first part of this paper looks at ways of …
Hypertext users often suffer from the “lost in hyperspace” problem: disorientation from too many jumps while traversing a complex network. One solution to this problem is improved authoring to create more comprehensible structures. This paper proposes several authoring tools, based on hypertext structure analysis.
In many hypertext systems authors are encouraged to create hierarchical structures, but when writing, the hierarchy is lost because of the inclusion of cross-reference links. The first part of this paper looks at ways of recovering lost hierarchies and finding new ones, offering authors different views of the same hypertext. The second part helps authors by identifying properties of the hypertext document. Multiple metrics are developed including compactness and stratum. Compactness indicates the intrinsic connectedness of the hypertext, and stratum reveals to what degree the hypertext is organized so that some nodes must be read before others.
Several existing hypertexts are used to illustrate the benefits of each technique. The collection of techniques provides a multifaceted view of the hypertext, which should allow authors to reduce undesired structural complexity and create documents that readers can traverse more easily.
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