Title
Trade-offs Between a Vertical Shared Display and Two Desktops in a Collaborative Path-Finding Task.
Abstract
Large vertical displays are considered well adapted for collaboration, due to their display surface and the space in front of them that can accommodate multiple people. However, there are few studies that empirically support this assertion, and they do not quantitatively assess the differences of collaboration in front of a shared display compared to a non-shared setup, such as multiple desktops with a common view. In this paper, we compare a large shared vertical display with two desktops, when pairs of users learn to perform a path-planning task. Our results did not indicate a significant difference in learning between the two setups, but found that participants adopted different task strategies. Moreover, while pairs were overall faster with the two desktops, quality was more consistent in the vertical shared display where pairs spent more time communicating, even though there is a-priori more implicit collaboration in this setup.
Year
Venue
Field
2017
Graphics Interface
Computer science,Assertion,Human–computer interaction,Trade offs
DocType
Citations 
PageRank 
Conference
0
0.34
References 
Authors
37
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Arnaud Prouzeau1274.74
Anastasia Bezerianos267437.75
Olivier Chapuis371637.19