Position vs. velocity control for tilt-based interaction
Robert J. Teather, I. Scott MacKenzie
Graphics Interface, May 2014, pp. 51--58.
Abstract: Research investigating factors in the design of tilt-based interfaces is presented. An experiment with 16 participants used a tablet and a 2D pointing task to compare position-control and velocity-control using device tilt to manipulate an on-screen cursor. Four selection modes were also evaluated, ranging from instantaneous selection upon hitting a target to a 500-ms time delay prior to selection. Results indicate that position-control was approximately 2× faster than velocity-control, regardless of selection delay. Position-control had higher pointing throughput (3.3 bps vs. 1.2 bps for velocity-control), more precise cursor motion, and was universally preferred by participants.
BibTeX format:
@inproceedings{Teather:2014:PVV,
  author = {Robert J. Teather and I. Scott MacKenzie},
  title = {Position vs. velocity control for tilt-based interaction},
  booktitle = {Graphics Interface},
  pages = {51--58},
  month = may,
  year = {2014},
}
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