Title
A New Look at an Old Study on Information Display: Washburne (1927) Reconsidered
Abstract
Washburne (1927) conducted the largest study to date on the display of quantitative information with tables and graphs. Measuring the accuracy of information recall, he concluded that bar graphs are particularly suited for complex comparisons between values, pictographs are best for simple comparisons, line graphs are best for identifying and comparing trends, and tables are best for specific values. These conclusions have intuitive appeal and were quoted in the literature on comparative displays. A reanalysis of the results indicates that only the claim that tables are best for recalling specific values is clearly supported by Washburne's data. The other conclusions were probably accepted without questioning because they appeal to intuition. Additional findings of the study, such as the importance of the logical ordering of items in a display, were not acknowledged in subsequent studies. In human factors, as in other fields, naive preconceptions exist which can impede the acquisition of new knowledge.
Year
DOI
Venue
1997
10.1518/001872097778827034
HUMAN FACTORS
Field
DocType
Volume
Graphics,Social psychology,Graph,Bar chart,Appeal,Computer science,Intuition,Information display,Cognition,Recall
Journal
39
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
3
0018-7208
5
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.55
9
1
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Joachim Meyer137641.28