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Can Automatic Abbreviation Expansion Improve the Text Entry Rates of Norwegian Text with Compound Words?
Author(s) -
Frode Eika Sandnes
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
duo research archive (university of oslo)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/3218585.3218586
Subject(s) - text entry , prefix , computer science , function (biology) , natural language processing , norwegian , compounding , artificial intelligence , speech recognition , human–computer interaction , linguistics , medicine , philosophy , nursing , evolutionary biology , biology
Text entry can be challenging for users with reduced motor function. Prefix-based prediction has been successfully applied for text in English and other languages. However, prefix-based text prediction does not work optimally in Germanic languages such as Norwegian where long words are constructed through linguistic compounding. This study explored automatic abbreviation expansion as a means for improving text entry performance. A mixed text entry experiment involving n = 36 participants without reduced motor function was conducted. Three types of input devices designed for individuals with reduced motor function were used in the experiments, namely a virtual keyboard operated by a touchpad, a software head mouse, and keyboard scanning. Physical QWERTY keyboards were also included for reference. The results show that the abbreviation only lead to a marginal improvement with the slowest of the four input techniques, namely keyboard scanning. Abbreviations yield slower text entry performance with the other text entry modes.

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