SAM: A Modular Framework for Self-Adapting Web Menus

01/24/2019
by   Camille Gobert, et al.
0

This paper presents SAM, a modular and extensible JavaScript framework for self-adapting menus on webpages. SAM allows control of two elementary aspects for adapting web menus: (1) the target policy, which assigns scores to menu items for adaptation, and (2) the adaptation style, which specifies how they are adapted on display. By decoupling them, SAM enables the exploration of different combinations independently. Several policies from literature are readily implemented, and paired with adaptation styles such as reordering and highlighting. The process - including user data logging - is local, offering privacy benefits and eliminating the need for server-side modifications. Researchers can use SAM to experiment adaptation policies and styles, and benchmark techniques in an ecological setting with real webpages. Practitioners can make websites self-adapting, and end-users can dynamically personalise typically static web menus.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
03/30/2020

Unsupervised Model Personalization while Preserving Privacy and Scalability: An Open Problem

This work investigates the task of unsupervised model personalization, a...
research
04/16/2002

Neutrality: A Necessity for Self-Adaptation

Self-adaptation is used in all main paradigms of evolutionary computatio...
research
03/04/2019

NoRML: No-Reward Meta Learning

Efficiently adapting to new environments and changes in dynamics is crit...
research
05/19/2022

Threshold Designer Adaptation: Improved Adaptation for Designers in Co-creative Systems

To best assist human designers with different styles, Machine Learning (...
research
05/22/2023

DADA: Dialect Adaptation via Dynamic Aggregation of Linguistic Rules

Existing large language models (LLMs) that mainly focus on Standard Amer...
research
03/07/2011

Design of Automatically Adaptable Web Wrappers

Nowadays, the huge amount of information distributed through the Web mot...
research
11/18/2021

Reining in Mobile Web Performance with Document and Permission Policies

The quality of experience with the mobile web remains poor, partially as...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset