Publication | Closed Access
The effect of egocentric body movements on users' navigation performance and spatial memory in zoomable user interfaces
48
Citations
27
References
2013
Year
Unknown Venue
CognitionMotor ControlHuman Performance ModelingAttentionEgocentric Body MovementsSocial SciencesKinesiologyNavigation PerformanceVirtual Reality3D User InteractionMultimodal Human Computer InterfaceEgocentric NavigationHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceDanceUser ExperienceHuman-machine InterfacePerceptual User InterfacePerception-action LoopCognitive ErgonomicsZoomable User InterfacesSpatial ComputingNavigation TechniquesEye TrackingExtended RealityHuman-computer InteractionSpatial CognitionHuman Movement
We present two experiments examining the impact of navigation techniques on users' navigation performance and spatial memory in a zoomable user interface (ZUI). The first experiment with 24 participants compared the effect of egocentric body movements with traditional multi-touch navigation. The results indicate a 47% decrease in path lengths and a 34% decrease in task time in favor of egocentric navigation, but no significant effect on users' spatial memory immediately after a navigation task. However, an additional second experiment with 8 participants revealed such a significant increase in performance of long-term spatial memory: The results of a recall task administered after a 15-minute distractor task indicate a significant advantage of 27% for egocentric body movements in spatial memory. Furthermore, a questionnaire about the subjects' workload revealed that the physical demand of the egocentric navigation was significantly higher but there was less mental demand.
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