Authors
George W Fitzmaurice, William Buxton
Publication date
1997/3/27
Book
Proceedings of the ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human factors in computing systems
Pages
43-50
Description
This paper reports on the experimental evaluation of a Graspable User Interface that employs a “spacemultiplexing” input scheme in which each function to be controlled has a dedicated physical transducer, each occupying its own space. This input style contrasts the more traditional “time-multiplexing” input scheme which uses one device (such as the mouse) to control different functions at different points in time. A tracking experiment was conducted to compare a traditional GUI design with its time-multiplex input scheme versus a Graspable UI design having a space-multiplex input scheme. We found that the space-multiplex conditions out perform the time-multiplex conditions. In addition, we found that the use of specialized physical form factors for the input devices instead of generic form factors provide a performance advantage. We rugue that the specialized devices serve as both visual and tactile functional …
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