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The Semantic Reader Project: Augmenting Scholarly Documents through AI-Powered Interactive Reading Interfaces

25 March 2023
Kyle Lo
Joseph Chee Chang
Andrew Head
Jonathan Bragg
Amy X. Zhang
Cassidy Trier
Chloe Anastasiades
Tal August
Russell Authur
Danielle Bragg
Erin Bransom
Isabel Cachola
Stefan Candra
Yoganand Chandrasekhar
Yen-Sung Chen
Evie (Yu-Yen) Cheng
Yvonne Chou
Doug Downey
Rob Evans
Raymond Fok
F.Q. Hu
Regan Huff
Dongyeop Kang
Tae Soo Kim
Rodney Michael Kinney
A. Kittur
Hyeonsu B Kang
Egor Klevak
Bailey Kuehl
Michael Langan
Matt Latzke
Jaron Lochner
Kelsey MacMillan
Eric Stuart Marsh
Tyler C. Murray
Aakanksha Naik
Ngoc-Uyen Nguyen
Srishti Palani
Soya Park
Caroline Paulic
Napol Rachatasumrit
Smita R Rao
Paul Sayre
Zejiang Shen
Pao Siangliulue
Luca Soldaini
Huy Tran
Madeleine van Zuylen
Lucy Lu Wang
Christopher Wilhelm
Caroline M Wu
Jiangjiang Yang
Angele Zamarron
Marti A. Hearst
Daniel S. Weld
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Abstract

Scholarly publications are key to the transfer of knowledge from scholars to others. However, research papers are information-dense, and as the volume of the scientific literature grows, the need for new technology to support the reading process grows. In contrast to the process of finding papers, which has been transformed by Internet technology, the experience of reading research papers has changed little in decades. The PDF format for sharing research papers is widely used due to its portability, but it has significant downsides including: static content, poor accessibility for low-vision readers, and difficulty reading on mobile devices. This paper explores the question "Can recent advances in AI and HCI power intelligent, interactive, and accessible reading interfaces -- even for legacy PDFs?" We describe the Semantic Reader Project, a collaborative effort across multiple institutions to explore automatic creation of dynamic reading interfaces for research papers. Through this project, we've developed ten research prototype interfaces and conducted usability studies with more than 300 participants and real-world users showing improved reading experiences for scholars. We've also released a production reading interface for research papers that will incorporate the best features as they mature. We structure this paper around challenges scholars and the public face when reading research papers -- Discovery, Efficiency, Comprehension, Synthesis, and Accessibility -- and present an overview of our progress and remaining open challenges.

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