RUSŇÁK, Vít, Caroline APPERT, Olivier CHAPUIS a Emmanuel PIETRIGA. Designing Coherent Gesture Sets for Multi-scale Navigation on Tabletops. Online. In Proceedings of the 2018 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. ACM, 2018, 12 s. ISBN 978-1-4503-5620-6. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3173574.3173716.
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Základní údaje
Originální název Designing Coherent Gesture Sets for Multi-scale Navigation on Tabletops
Autoři RUSŇÁK, Vít, Caroline APPERT, Olivier CHAPUIS a Emmanuel PIETRIGA.
Vydání Proceedings of the 2018 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 12 s. 2018.
Nakladatel ACM
Další údaje
Originální jazyk angličtina
Typ výsledku Stať ve sborníku
Obor 10201 Computer sciences, information science, bioinformatics
Stát vydavatele Česká republika
Utajení není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Forma vydání elektronická verze "online"
ISBN 978-1-4503-5620-6
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3173574.3173716
Klíčová slova anglicky Multi-scale navigation; tabletop; multi-touch interaction
Štítky best2
Příznaky Mezinárodní význam, Recenzováno
Změnil Změnil: RNDr. Vít Rusňák, Ph.D., učo 172757. Změněno: 9. 1. 2018 10:16.
Anotace
Multi-scale navigation interfaces were originally designed to enable single users to explore large visual information spaces on desktop workstations. These interfaces can also be quite useful on tabletops. However, their adaptation to co-located multi-user contexts is not straightforward. The literature describes different interfaces, that only offer a limited subset of navigation actions. In this paper, we first identify a comprehensive set of actions to effectively support multi-scale navigation. We report on a guessability study in which we elicited user-defined gestures for triggering these actions, showing that there is no natural design solution, but that users heavily rely on the now-ubiquitousem slide, pinch and turn gestures. We then propose two interface designs based on this set of three basic gestures: one involves two-hand variations on these gestures, the other combines them with widgets. A comparative study suggests that users can easily learn both, and that the gesture-based, visually-minimalist design is a viable option, that saves display space for other controls.
VytisknoutZobrazeno: 19. 9. 2024 15:22