The Lumière Project: Bayesian User Modeling for Inferring the Goals and Needs of Software Users
Abstract
The Lumiere Project centers on harnessing probability and utility to provide assistance to computer software users. We review work on Bayesian user models that can be employed to infer a user's needs by considering a user's background, actions, and queries. Several problems were tackled in Lumiere research, including (1) the construction of Bayesian models for reasoning about the time-varying goals of computer users from their observed actions and queries, (2) gaining access to a stream of events from software applications, (3) developing a language for transforming system events into observational variables represented in Bayesian user models, (4) developing persistent profiles to capture changes in a user's expertise, and (5) the development of an overall architecture for an intelligent user interface. Lumiere prototypes served as the basis for the Ofice Assistant in the Microsoft Office '97 suite of productivity applications.
Cite
Text
Horvitz et al. "The Lumière Project: Bayesian User Modeling for Inferring the Goals and Needs of Software Users." Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, 1998.Markdown
[Horvitz et al. "The Lumière Project: Bayesian User Modeling for Inferring the Goals and Needs of Software Users." Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, 1998.](https://mlanthology.org/uai/1998/horvitz1998uai-lumiere/)BibTeX
@inproceedings{horvitz1998uai-lumiere,
title = {{The Lumière Project: Bayesian User Modeling for Inferring the Goals and Needs of Software Users}},
author = {Horvitz, Eric and Breese, Jack S. and Heckerman, David and Hovel, David and Rommelse, Koos},
booktitle = {Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence},
year = {1998},
pages = {256-265},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/uai/1998/horvitz1998uai-lumiere/}
}