Publication
Human Factors Society Annual Meeting 1991
Conference paper

Comparison of touch interface techniques for a graphical windowing software environment

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Abstract

This paper reports a behavioral evaluation of touch interface techniques intended for use with highly interactive, graphical, windowing software environments, previous research (Mack and Lang, 1989), indicated that touch interface techniques can produce levels of task performance in such environments comparable to that obtained using conventional mouse pointing devices. In the Mack and Lang study, touch interactions emulated mouse techniques such that single and double taps (contact and lift-off), and tap, hold and drag corresponded to mouse clicks and double-clicks, and dragging with the mouse. While the results were encouraging, problems with the touch techniques remain. The purpose of this study was to compare two alternatives to direct mouse emulation for controlling the interpretation of touch interactions using a stylus or finger as input devices. This study also evaluated two touch-tailored interface techniques: gesture-based commands and pop-up (display) keyboard. Finger performance improved to levels comparable to those for stylus when an alternative protocol for controlling interaction modes was employed. Gestures led to performance comparable to conventional menu bar and pull-down menu techniques. The pop-up keyboard significantly slowed performance.

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Publication

Human Factors Society Annual Meeting 1991

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