Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Human Capabilities: Perception, Attention CS352
2
Announcements Project proposal part 3 due tonight. Project user data out later today. 2
3
Where we are… Where we are in PRICPE: –Predispositions: Did this in Project Proposal. –RI: Research is in process (studying users), due mid next week. Should lead to Insights. –CP: Concept and initial (very low-fi) Prototypes. –Evaluate throughout, repeat iteratively!!
4
Study the User: Some Attributes Physical attributes –age, gender, size, reach, visual angles, etc… Perceptual abilities –vision, hearing, heat sensitivity… Cognitive abilities –memory span, reading level, musical training, math… Personality and social traits –likes, dislikes, preferences, patience… Cultural and international diversity –languages, reading order… Special populations, (dis)abilities
5
Design Implications/Insights PopulationImplications Users 16-80 yrsRange of text sizes Range of grip strength Some French speakers Multilingual interface Astronaut usersExtensive training available Military contextAesthetics less of an issue Ruggedness is critical
6
Perception and the Senses –Senses: smell, taste, sight, hearing, touch, proprioception (body position awareness), pain, temperature, balance,... –Change: Adaptation: Senses physically react to change. Absence of change leads us to lose sensitivity. Eye compensates for this some by shifting around, but nose can't do that (which is why we become sensitized to a smell). –But: there is a “just noticeable difference” eg: Doubling # photons does not double perceived intensity of a picture.
7
Perception How information is acquired from the world by senses –they are the input devices to the brain –so, if doesn’t make it thru senses => not delivered to brain. Obvious implication is to design representations that are readily perceivable Q: How can we tell when they are and when they aren’t? –A: see next slides.
8
Visual perception Eye: Pupil/lens, place image on retina. From there, to brain. –Retina has photoreceptor cells: rods and cones. –Rods: tell us dark vs. light (intensity, shades of grey). Can detect in very dim light (night vision). Perceive motion. Lots of rods (120M). –Cones can detect color. But need much light to do this. Only a few cones (6-7M).
9
Retina Center of retina has most of the cones ? –allows for high acuity of objects focused at center Edge of retina is dominated by rods ? –allows detecting motion of threats in periphery
10
Color Sensitivity from: http://www.cs.gsu.edu/classes/hypgraph/color/coloreff.htm 64% of cones see red, 32% see green, only 2% see blue insensitivity to short wavelengths cyan to deep-blue
11
Color Sensitivity As we age –lens yellows & absorbs shorter wavelengths ? sensitivity to blue is even more reduced –fluid between lens and retina absorbs more light perceive a lower level of brightness Implications? –don’t rely on blue for text or small objects! –older users need brighter colors
12
Focus Different wavelengths of light focused at different distances behind eye’s lens –need for constant refocusing ? causes fatigue –be careful about color combinations Pure (saturated) colors require more focusing then less pure (desaturated) –don’t use saturated colors in UIs unless you really need something to stand out (stop sign) Rods and cones
13
Components of “Color”: HLS Hue (“color”) –eg, Red vs. Light –“how much light it reflects” (regardless of hue) –eg: closeness to black vs. Saturation (“how much paint you added”). Light Not much light
14
Contrast – How-to’s Choose 1 hue, from light recommended hues, lighten, desaturate Choose 2 nd hue from dark recommendations, darken, saturate. And not adjacent colors. Effective Not as effective
15
Which is easiest to read and why? What is the time?
16
Color Deficiency A.k.a. color-blindness, two types Different photopigment response –reduces capability to discern small color diffs particularly those of low brightness –most common Red-green deficiency is best known –lack of either green or red cones ? can’t discriminate colors dependent on R & G –7-8% of males red from green, 0.4% of women.
17
Color deficiency example http://hcc.cc.gatech.edu/ getDocument.php? cat=5&doc=154
18
Color Guidelines Avoid simultaneous display of highly saturated, spectrally extreme colors –e.g., no cyans/blues at the same time as reds, why? refocusing! –desaturated combinations are better pastels Opponent colors go well together –(red & green) or (yellow & blue)
19
Color Guidelines Size of detectable changes in color varies –hard to detect changes in reds, purples, & greens –easier to detect changes in yellows & blue-greens Older users need higher brightness levels to distinguish colors Avoid red & green in the periphery - why? –lack of RG cones there -- yellows & blues work in periphery Avoid pure blue for text, lines, & small shapes –blue makes a fine background color –avoid adjacent colors that differ only in blue
20
Other senses –Sound (hearing): Pitch – frequency, loudness – amplitude, location We are good at sound! We have a lot of bandwidth, in part because of language facilities. UIs can use when appropriate –but can hog our attention.
21
Other senses –Touch: Pressure, pain, temperature (hot/cold). –Phone w/ haptic feedback
22
Perception take-aways 1 Some UI devices/paradigms leverage more senses than others. –eg: WIMP? –eg: cell phone? –eg: iPhone? –eg: Wii?
23
Perception take-aways 2 These are pre-brain! –If you want info to get to/from brain, has to make it thru senses first. –These are the human UI to the brain. Must be: –discernable –distinguishable from similar –if combined with Change, will be more likely to be perceived, but can steal your attention eg: banner ad examplesbanner ad examples
24
Attention Selecting what to focus on, at a point in time, from the range of possibilities. Banner ads steal attention pre-brain. Attention can also be in brain. We focus on what we think is relevant to our task. But if didn’t make it thru senses, not a contender.
25
Brain attention Can brain multi-task? –No. Mostly attend to one thing at once. Then...? –Just like operating systems: Interrupt system, context switch. Cost of context switch. Thus, UIs should encourage this with care. –Hands-free cells while driving? Emails while in talks/meetings? –Flow?
26
So... Avoid cluttered UI.
27
Demanding Brain’s Attention: Interruptions When COMPUTER decides to call attention to something. Four important kinds: –Immediate For when MUST pay immediate attention. –Mediated Computer decides when to interrupt. –Scheduled –Negotiated Best for productivity AND learning.
28
Attention Take-aways (Basics for UIs) Users can’t attend to everything at once. If info does not make it thru senses, –brain can’t attend to it. Once in brain: –users attend to what they think is most relevant. (More on this later in course.) User has the right to their own attention. –There is a cost to making them switch. –Do not steal it arbitrarily.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.