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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zeng, Linxiu, Kuang, Emily, Zhao, Jian
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.21205
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author Zeng, Linxiu
Kuang, Emily
Zhao, Jian
author_facet Zeng, Linxiu
Kuang, Emily
Zhao, Jian
contents Authoring presentation slides involves navigating contextual constraints that shape how content is structured, adapted, and reused. While prior work frames constraints as limitations, little is known about how presenters actively reason about them. We conducted a formative study with ten presenters to examine how constraints emerge, are interpreted, and influence authoring decisions, leading to the Constraint-based Multi-session Presentation Authoring (CMPA) framework. CMPA treats time, audience, and communicative intent as key constraints shaping authoring. We instantiated CMPA in ReSlide, a research prototype for constraint-aware slide creation and reuse, and conducted two user studies on (1) single-session behaviors and (2) multi-session workflows. Compared to a baseline tool, ReSlide helped presenters treat constraints as active design drivers that guide narrative construction. The second study further shows how presenters flexibly reuse and adapt content across authoring cycles as constraints evolve. We then propose design implications for future constraint-aware presentation tools.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_21205
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle When Constraints Limit and Inspire: Characterizing Presentation Authoring Practices for Evolving Narratives
Zeng, Linxiu
Kuang, Emily
Zhao, Jian
Human-Computer Interaction
Authoring presentation slides involves navigating contextual constraints that shape how content is structured, adapted, and reused. While prior work frames constraints as limitations, little is known about how presenters actively reason about them. We conducted a formative study with ten presenters to examine how constraints emerge, are interpreted, and influence authoring decisions, leading to the Constraint-based Multi-session Presentation Authoring (CMPA) framework. CMPA treats time, audience, and communicative intent as key constraints shaping authoring. We instantiated CMPA in ReSlide, a research prototype for constraint-aware slide creation and reuse, and conducted two user studies on (1) single-session behaviors and (2) multi-session workflows. Compared to a baseline tool, ReSlide helped presenters treat constraints as active design drivers that guide narrative construction. The second study further shows how presenters flexibly reuse and adapt content across authoring cycles as constraints evolve. We then propose design implications for future constraint-aware presentation tools.
title When Constraints Limit and Inspire: Characterizing Presentation Authoring Practices for Evolving Narratives
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.21205