Salvato in:
Dettagli Bibliografici
Autori principali: Hao, Pan, Selvakumaran, Rishi, Sun, Jacob, Wang, Qianwen
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.14668
Tags: Aggiungi Tag
Nessun Tag, puoi essere il primo ad aggiungerne!!
_version_ 1866913038084341760
author Hao, Pan
Selvakumaran, Rishi
Sun, Jacob
Wang, Qianwen
author_facet Hao, Pan
Selvakumaran, Rishi
Sun, Jacob
Wang, Qianwen
contents Complex visual interfaces are powerful yet have a steep learning curve, as users must navigate feature-rich visual interfaces while reasoning about domain-specific operations. Existing approaches either deliver assistance through a separate chat-based interaction, or require substantial application-specific engineering to build support natively into each interface. To address the gaps, we propose in-situ assistance: a mode of support delivered directly within any live web interface through lightweight, browser-level interventions on the Document Object Model (DOM), without rebuilding the application or modifying its underlying logic. We contribute a design space and a computational pipeline for DOM-mediated in-situ assistance, characterizing how GUI agents can insert, mutate, or recompose web elements to make the interface easier for users to understand, use, and navigate. We instantiate in-situ assistance in DOMSteer, a Chrome extension that interprets a user's help request and live interface context, grounds it to relevant UI elements, and executes reversible DOM manipulations directly on the live page to deliver assistance, including contextual tooltips, control highlighting, layout reorganization. Quantitative evaluations on two complex visual interfaces show that DOMSteer delivers reliable and efficient in-situ assistance. Use cases and a comparative user study with baseline ChatGPTAtlas demonstrate the usability and effectiveness of DOMSteer. Altogether, these findings point to a broader role for GUI agents: not just assisting from the sidelines, but actively reconfiguring live interfaces to support users in the moment.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_14668
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Beyond Chat and Clicks: GUI Agents for In-Situ Assistance via Live Interface Transformation
Hao, Pan
Selvakumaran, Rishi
Sun, Jacob
Wang, Qianwen
Human-Computer Interaction
Complex visual interfaces are powerful yet have a steep learning curve, as users must navigate feature-rich visual interfaces while reasoning about domain-specific operations. Existing approaches either deliver assistance through a separate chat-based interaction, or require substantial application-specific engineering to build support natively into each interface. To address the gaps, we propose in-situ assistance: a mode of support delivered directly within any live web interface through lightweight, browser-level interventions on the Document Object Model (DOM), without rebuilding the application or modifying its underlying logic. We contribute a design space and a computational pipeline for DOM-mediated in-situ assistance, characterizing how GUI agents can insert, mutate, or recompose web elements to make the interface easier for users to understand, use, and navigate. We instantiate in-situ assistance in DOMSteer, a Chrome extension that interprets a user's help request and live interface context, grounds it to relevant UI elements, and executes reversible DOM manipulations directly on the live page to deliver assistance, including contextual tooltips, control highlighting, layout reorganization. Quantitative evaluations on two complex visual interfaces show that DOMSteer delivers reliable and efficient in-situ assistance. Use cases and a comparative user study with baseline ChatGPTAtlas demonstrate the usability and effectiveness of DOMSteer. Altogether, these findings point to a broader role for GUI agents: not just assisting from the sidelines, but actively reconfiguring live interfaces to support users in the moment.
title Beyond Chat and Clicks: GUI Agents for In-Situ Assistance via Live Interface Transformation
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.14668