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Yonglei Tao School of Computing & Info Systems GVSU
Ch10 Screen Layout Yonglei Tao School of Computing & Info Systems GVSU
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Screen Layout Find out Design What the user is doing
What information is required In what order things are likely to be needed Design Let the required interactions drive the layout
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Remote Control for Car Door
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A Problem in 2008 Election A voting machine with a touch screen
Barack Obama John McCain
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News Map
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User Performance Eye movement Action sequences Task sequences
Top to bottom, left to right Action sequences Touch, keyboard, and mouse Task sequences Work flow for accomplishing user tasks And task frequencies Evaluation of layout
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Layout Appropriateness
A metric to assess if the spatial layout is in harmony with the user tasks Help layout design and redesign Specify task sequences and their frequencies Produce a layout to minimize visual scanning Evaluate it by how well it matches the tasks Take into consideration user expectations about the positions of fields
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Layout Appropriateness
Formula Cost = Σ task frequency * cost of task all tasks A task is a sequence of widget-level actions users perform Costs are based on the distance users must move the mouse or Fitts’s law
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The Original Design
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Two Versions of Redesign
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Testing Results Task Completion Time User Preference Rating
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Issues to Consider Grouping and structure Ordering Decoration
Alignment Evaluation
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Grouping and Structure
Logical together → Physical together Billing details: Name Address: … Credit card no Delivery details: Delivery time Order details: Item Description Quantity Unit Price Cost size 10 screws (boxes) …… … … …
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Order of Groups and Elements
Find out the user's natural order of doing their tasks Match it on screen Provide support for navigation
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Decoration White space Borders Headings and captions
Reinforce groupings, not for single fields and command buttons Headings and captions Fonts, colors, and image
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Space to Separate
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Space to Structure
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Space to Highlight
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Aligning Screen Elements
Minimize alignment points on a window Easy eye and mouse movement Vertical orientation A top-to-bottom flow through controls Horizontal orientation Need to enhance distinctiveness Balance elements with multiple groups and multiple columns
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Alignment Text Large numbers Alan Dix Alan Dix Janet Finlay
Gregory Abowd Russell Beale Alan Dix Janet Finlay Gregory Abowd Russell Beale Dix , Alan Finlay, Janet Abowd, Gregory Beale, Russell
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Multiple Column Lists Sherbert 75 Toffee 120 Chocolate 35
Fruit gums 27 Coconut dreams 85
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Multiple Column Lists (Cont.)
Sherbert 75 Toffee 120 Chocolate 35 Fruit gums 27 Coconut dreams 85 Sherbert 75 Toffee 120 Chocolate 35 Fruit gums 27 Coconut dreams 85
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From IEEE conference site. Issues
From IEEE conference site. Issues. (1) default choice is “of interest”, in fact, any one can have only less than 10, so it forces the user to look at every row and click on most of them since there are a large number of choices. (2) the background color that highlight each row is not the same and a row is quite long. It is hard to stay with a row from the left to the right end precisely.
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Eye Tracking Eye tracking is the process of measuring either the point of gaze or the motion of an eye relative to the head Eye tracking demo
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Example - Eye Tracking Test
Factors on form completion Label placement Formatting Type of form content Test subjects Novice and expert users
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Eye Tracking – Gaze Plots
Source: “Label Placement in Forms”, Matteo Penzo, at
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Gaze Plots (Cont.)
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Time Spent on a Search Form
Rookies on eBay Pros on Amazon
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Layout Example F3.38
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Layout Example F3.40
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Layout Example F3.31
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Layout Example F3.39
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Layout Example F3.44
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Layout Example
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Layout Examples
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Layout Example
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Design Guidelines Follow the natural flow of work
Group related fields effectively Provide good default values whenever possible Gray out unavailable components Use meaningful labels
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