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Adaptive user interface

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An adaptive user interface (also known as AUI) is a user interface (UI) which adapts, that is changes, its layout and elements to the needs of the user or context and is similarly alterable by each user.[1][2]

These mutually-reciprocal qualities of both adapting and being adaptable are, in a true AUI (sometimes referred to as an AUII[citation needed]), also innate to elements that comprise the interface's components; portions of the interface might adapt to and affect other portions of the interface.

This later mechanism is usually employed to integrate two logically-distinct components, such as an interactive document and an application (e.g. a web browser) into one seamless whole.

The user adaptation is often a negotiated process, as an adaptive user interface's designers ignore where user interface components ought to go while affording a means by which both the designers and the user can determine their placement, often (though not always) in a semi-automated, if not fully automated manner.

Advantages

Disadvantages

See also

References

  1. ^ "Workshop on Social Adaptive User Interfaces (SoAUI'07) September 11, 2007 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil". Retrieved 8 October 2011.
  2. ^ Malinowski, edited by Matthias Schneider-Hufschmidt, Thomas Kühme, Uwe (1993). Adaptive user interfaces : principles and practice. Amsterdam: North-Holland. ISBN 978-0-444-81545-3. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

Further reading