Young vs old – landscape vs portrait: a comparative study of touch gesture performance
Author:
Wulf Linda,Garschall Markus,Klein Michael,Tscheligi Manfred
Abstract
Purpose
– The purpose of this paper is to gain deeper insights into performance differences of younger and older users when performing touch gestures, as well as the influence of tablet device orientation (portrait vs landscape).
Design/methodology/approach
– The authors performed a comparative study involving 20 younger (25-45 years) and 20 older participants (65-85 years). Each participant executed six gestures with each device orientation. Age was set as a between-subject factor. The dependent variables were task completion time and error rates (missed target rate and finger lift rate). To measure various performance characteristics, the authors implemented an application for the iPad that logged completion time and error rates of the participants when performing six gestural tasks – tap, drag, pinch, pinch-pan, rotate left and rotate right – for both device orientations.
Findings
– The results show a significant effect of age on completion time and error rates. Means reveal faster completion times and lower error rates for younger users than for older users. In addition, a significant effect of device orientation on error rates could be stated. Means show higher error rates for portrait orientation than for landscape orientation. Qualitative results reveal a clear preference for landscape orientation in both age groups and a lower acceptance of rotation gestures among older participants.
Originality/value
– In this study the authors were able to show the importance of device orientation as an influencing factor on touch interaction performance, indicating that age is not the exclusive influencing factor.
Reference17 articles.
1. Culén, A.L.
and
Bratteteig, T.
(2013), “Touch-screens and elderly users: a perfect match?”, ACHI 2013, The Sixth International Conference on Advances in Computer-Human Interactions, Nice, pp. 460-5. 2. Czaja, S.J.
,
Peter, G.
and
Hanson, V.L.
(2009), “Introduction to the special issue on aging and information technology”,
ACM Transactions on Accessible Computing (TACCESS)
, Vol. 2 No. 1, pp. 1-4. 3. Findlater, L.
,
Froehlich, J.E.
,
Fattal, K.
,
Wobbrock, J.O.
and
Dastyar, T.
(2013), “Age-related differences in performance with touchscreens compared to traditional mouse input”, Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, pp. 343-6. 4. Hourcade, J.P.
,
Nguyen, C.M.
,
Perry, K.B.
and
Denburg, N.L.
(2010), “Pointassist for older adults: analyzing sub-movement characteristics to aid in pointing tasks”, Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, pp. 1115-24. 5. Kin, K.
,
Agrawala, M.
and
DeRose, T.
(2009), “Determining the benefits of direct-touch, bimanual, and multifinger input on a multitouch workstation”, Proceedings of Graphics Interface 2009, Canadian Information Processing Society, Toronto, Ontario, pp. 119-24.
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|