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The Activity Tunnel - An Experiment for Improved Understanding of Program Behavior
Stresa, Italy September 05-September 07
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/HCC.2001.995287IEEE 2001 Symposium on Human Centric ...
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Dieter Kranzlm?, Johannes Kepler University Linz
Bernhard Reitinger, Johannes Kepler University Linz
Jens Volkert, Johannes Kepler University Linz
Understanding a program?s behavior is of major importance for software developers, especially for program analysis activities. This fact is further pushed by ever more complex applications, increasing the demand for corresponding tool support. A solution to this problem is visualization, where the multi-dimensional relations of executing programs are expressed by some means of computer graphics or related multimedia techniques. An example for a truly human-centric environment is the activity tunnel, which tries to illustrate the activity of parallel programs during execution. The central metapher of this approach is to let the user "feel the program". This effect is aspired by 3-dimensional visualization and corresponding sound stimuli within the CAVE Virtual Reality environment.
Citation:
Dieter Kranzlm?, Bernhard Reitinger, Jens Volkert, "The Activity Tunnel - An Experiment for Improved Understanding of Program Behavior," hcc, pp.342, IEEE 2001 Symposium on Human Centric Computing Languages and Environments (HCC'01), 2001
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