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Oral messages improve visual search
Author(s) -
Suzanne Kieffer,
Noëlle Carbonell
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
hal (le centre pour la communication scientifique directe)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
ISBN - 1-59593-353-0
DOI - 10.1145/1133265.1133342
Subject(s) - computer science , task (project management) , usability , presentation (obstetrics) , visual search , human–computer interaction , gesture , mode (computer interface) , multimodality , block (permutation group theory) , modalities , modality (human–computer interaction) , rapid serial visual presentation , multimodal interaction , artificial intelligence , multimedia , cognition , psychology , world wide web , mathematics , management , neuroscience , economics , radiology , medicine , social science , geometry , sociology
Input multimodality combining speech and hand gestures has motivated numerous usability studies. Contrastingly, issues relating to the design and ergonomic evaluation of multimodal output messages combining speech with visual modalities have not yet been addressed extensively.The experimental study presented here addresses one of these issues. Its aim is to assess the actual efficiency and usability of oral system messages including some brief spatial information for helping users to locate objects on crowded displays rapidly and without effort.Target presentation mode, scene spatial structure and task difficulty were chosen as independent variables. Two conditions were defined: the visual target presentation mode (VP condition) and the multimodal target presentation mode (MP condition). Each participant carried out two blocks of visual search tasks (120 tasks per block, and one block per condition). Scene target presentation mode, scene structure and task difficulty were found to be significant factors. Multimodal target presentation mode proved to be more efficient than visual target presentation. In addition, participants expressed very positive judgments on multimodal target presentations which were preferred to visual presentations by a majority of participants. Besides, the contribution of spatial messages to visual search speed and accuracy was influenced by scene spatial structure and task difficulty. First, messages improved search efficiency to a lesser extent for 2D array layouts than for some other symmetrical layouts, although the use of 2D arrays for displaying pictures is currently prevailing. Second, message usefulness increased with task difficulty. Most of these results are statistically significant.

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