Affiliation:
1. Univ. Lille, Inria, CNRS, Centrale Lille, UMR 9189 CRIStAL, Lille, France
Abstract
Pointing-based interaction interferences are situations wherein GUI elements appear, disappear, or change shortly before being selected, and too late for the user to inhibit their movement. Their cause lays in the design of most GUIs, for which any user event on an interactive element unquestionably reflects the user’s intention—even one millisecond after that element has changed. Previous work indicate that interferences can cause frustration and sometimes severe consequences. This article investigates new default behaviors for GUI elements that aim to prevent the occurrences of interferences or to mitigate their consequences. We present a design space of the advantages and technical requirements of these behaviors and demonstrate in a controlled study how simple rules can reduce the occurrences of so-called “
Pop-up
-style” interferences and user frustration. We then discuss their application to various forms of interaction interferences. We conclude by addressing the feasibility and trade-offs of implementing these behaviors in existing systems.
Funder
Agence Nationale de la Recherche
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Reference31 articles.
1. Dwell-and-spring
2. Reciprocal Drag-and-Drop
3. Rewritable Routines in Human Interaction with Public Technology;Baber Chris;International Journal of Cognitive Ergonomics,1997
4. Slip errors and cue salience
5. Using thematic analysis in psychology