Improving Semantic Transparency of ...
Type de document :
Communication dans un congrès avec actes
Titre :
Improving Semantic Transparency of Committee-Designed Languages through Crowd-sourcing
Auteur(s) :
El Kouhen, Amine [Auteur]
Gherbi, Abdelouahed [Auteur]
Dumoulin, Cedric [Auteur]
Laboratoire d'Informatique Fondamentale de Lille [LIFL]
Gherbi, Abdelouahed [Auteur]
Dumoulin, Cedric [Auteur]
Laboratoire d'Informatique Fondamentale de Lille [LIFL]
Titre de la manifestation scientifique :
14th Workshop on Domain-Specific Modeling @ SPLASH
Ville :
Oregon - Portland
Pays :
Etats-Unis d'Amérique
Date de début de la manifestation scientifique :
2014-10-21
Date de publication :
2014-10-21
Mot(s)-clé(s) en anglais :
Visual Languages
UML
Semantic Transparency
Crowdsourcing
UML
Semantic Transparency
Crowdsourcing
Discipline(s) HAL :
Informatique [cs]/Génie logiciel [cs.SE]
Résumé en anglais : [en]
Committee-designed languages such as those of the OMG consor-tium are widely used in both industry and academia. These lan-guages seem to be used increasingly by users with no technical background for the visualization, ...
Lire la suite >Committee-designed languages such as those of the OMG consor-tium are widely used in both industry and academia. These lan-guages seem to be used increasingly by users with no technical background for the visualization, documentation and specification of workflows, data and software systems. However, according to several studies on these languages, the used visual notations do not seem to convey any particular semantics and the recognition of such notations is not perceptually immediate. This lack of se-mantic transparency increases the cognitive load to differentiate concepts from each other and slows down recognition and learning of the language constructs. This paper proposes a process, which leverages the crowd-sourcing to improve the semantic transparency of such languages. We believe that involving end-users in the de-sign process of the languages visual notations should increase the expressiveness of these languages and then their acceptance for a wide range of novice-users.Lire moins >
Lire la suite >Committee-designed languages such as those of the OMG consor-tium are widely used in both industry and academia. These lan-guages seem to be used increasingly by users with no technical background for the visualization, documentation and specification of workflows, data and software systems. However, according to several studies on these languages, the used visual notations do not seem to convey any particular semantics and the recognition of such notations is not perceptually immediate. This lack of se-mantic transparency increases the cognitive load to differentiate concepts from each other and slows down recognition and learning of the language constructs. This paper proposes a process, which leverages the crowd-sourcing to improve the semantic transparency of such languages. We believe that involving end-users in the de-sign process of the languages visual notations should increase the expressiveness of these languages and then their acceptance for a wide range of novice-users.Lire moins >
Langue :
Anglais
Comité de lecture :
Oui
Audience :
Internationale
Vulgarisation :
Non
Collections :
Source :
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