Information Tiling
We will investigate the concept of active information tiles to
represent the context and information required by a user while performing a
future task. Before a user leaves the desktop, he will use a novel authoring
tool to prepare one or more tiles. Tiles are stored at a desktop repository,
where they actively gather information that will be needed later.
When they become relevant, tile summaries are delivered to the PDA.
We will experiment with information tiles, using as an application perinatal
dispatch and transport programs at the Stanford and Packard Hospitals.
These programs provide perinatal care, including transport for
critically ill infants and high-risk maternity cases requiring referral to
a regional center. The dispatch center, nursery, receiving doctors, and
ambulance
or helicopter teams, as well as the physicians and administrators of the
referring hospital
are involved in each transport incident. Since the process occurs outside
of the regular patient admission routine, paper and disjoint computer
records of relevant information are created many times over. With
the help of relevant hospital staff we will demonstrate how information for
each incident can be represented by an information tile which is continuously
updated by participants at different locations: administrative information,
test
results, observed reaction to drugs, history of vital signs, status during
transport, ambulance location, etc. Participants will in effect communicate
with each other through the tile. This strategy will provide participants with
a conceptual organization and context when interacting with the transport
program information space. For example, the query facility will disambiguate
the notion of "patient", "recent vital signs", or "phone messages", based on the tile
that is currently relevant: the term "patient" is always taken to mean the
patient described by the current tile.
The implementation of information tiles will require us to understand how to
partition information spaces, and how to construct information composites
that are fed from the larger digital library through standing queries. Our implementation will
include an authoring component that makes it easy for users to build tiles and
sequences of tiles that will fill their needs on the road. These tiles will need
to be modifiable remotely, via the PDA. We also need to develop indexing and query
processing facilities for tile histories (e.g., to discover the status of a patient
an hour ago). Since the tile at the PDA may not contain the full history, the
processing may have to be coordinated with the desktop server. We will build and
demonstrate an active tile environment, and will evaluate its effectiveness for
providing continuous information access at handheld devices.
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