Philip D. Gray
University of Glasgow
89 Papers
1K Citations
Philip D. Gray is an academic researcher from University of Glasgow. The author has contributed to research in topics: User interface & User interface design. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 89 publications.
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Papers
Putting the feel in ’look and feel‘
Ian Oakley,Marilyn Rose McGee,Stephen Brewster,Philip D. Gray +3 more
- 01 Apr 2000
TL;DR: An investigation of the use of touch as a way of reducing visual overload in the conventional desktop using the PHANToM haptic device as a means of interacting with a conventional graphical user interface results indicated that the haptic effects did not improve users performance in terms of task completion time.
Temporal aspects of tasks in the user action notation
H. Rex Hartson,Philip D. Gray +1 more
TL;DR: The work reported here addresses the need to identify temporal relationships within user task descriptions and to express explicitly and precisely how designers view temporal relationships among those tasks.
Teallach: a model-based user interface development environment for object databases
Tony Griffiths,Peter J. Barclay,Norman W. Paton,Jo McKirdy,Jessie Kennedy,Philip D. Gray,Richard Cooper,Carole Goble,Paulo Pinheiro da Silva +8 more
TL;DR: The Teallach model-based user interface development environment for object databases is presented, describing the models it supports, the relationships between these models, the tool used to construct interfaces using the models and the generation of Java programs from the declarative models.
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Teallach: a model-based user interface development environment for object databases
Tony Griffiths,Peter J. Barclay,Jo McKirdy,Norman W. Paton,Philip D. Gray,Jessie Kennedy,Richard Cooper,Carole Goble,Adrian West,Michael Smyth +9 more
- 05 Sep 1999
TL;DR: This paper presents a model-based user interface development environment for object databases, describing the models it supports, the relationships between these models, and the tool used to construct interfaces using the models.
Utilising handheld computers to monitor and support patients receiving chemotherapy: results of a UK-based feasibility study
Nora Kearney,Lisa Kidd,Morven Miller,Meurig Sage,J. Khorrami,Marilyn Rose McGee,J. Cassidy,K. Niven,Philip D. Gray +8 more
TL;DR: This project suggests that a handheld-computer-based symptom management tool is feasible and acceptable to both patients and health professionals in complementing the care of patients receiving chemotherapy.
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