Title
More than speed? an empirical study of touchscreens and body awareness on an object manipulation task
Abstract
Touchscreen interfaces do more than allow users to execute speedy interactions. Three interfaces (touchscreen, mouse-drag, on-screen button) were used in the service of performing an object manipulation task. Results showed that planning time was shortest with touch screens, that touchscreens allowed high action knowledge users to perform the task more efficiently, and that only with touchscreens was the ability to rotate the object the same across all axes of rotation. The concept of closeness is introduced to explain the potential advantages of touchscreen interfaces.
Year
DOI
Venue
2011
10.1007/978-3-642-21605-3_4
HCI (2)
Keywords
Field
DocType
touch screen,speedy interaction,object manipulation task,touchscreen interface,on-screen button,potential advantage,empirical study,body awareness,high action knowledge user
Virtual reality,Computer science,Closeness,Touchscreen,Body awareness,Human–computer interaction,Multimedia,Empirical research
Conference
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
6762
0302-9743
4
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.65
7
6