Ease of icon processing can predict icon appeal

Authors: McDougall, S. and Reppa, I.

Journal: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)

Volume: 8004 LNCS

Issue: PART 1

Pages: 575-584

eISSN: 1611-3349

ISBN: 9783642392313

ISSN: 0302-9743

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-39232-0_62

Abstract:

Correlations between subjective ratings of interface usability and appeal have been frequently reported. This study examined the possibility that the relationship between usability and appeal are underpinned by implicit perceptions of ease of processing which act as a heuristic in making judgments of appeal. Ease of processing was manipulated by varying the amount of experience participants gained with icons in a search task prior to judging appeal, as well as varying the familiarity and visual complexity of the icons presented. These manipulations systematically affected response times in the search task (an objective measure of usability). The effects observed in appeal judgments followed thesame pattern as for search times, demonstrating that ease of processing predicts judgments of appeal. This suggests that our understanding of interface appeal needs to be predicated on an appreciation of the factors affecting the ease with which information on an interface is processed. © 2013 Springer-Verlag.

Source: Scopus

Ease of processing can predict icon appeal

Authors: McDougall, S. and Reppa, I.

Conference: HCII 2013

Dates: 21-26 July 2013

Publisher: Springer

Abstract:

Correlations between subjective ratings of interface usability and appeal have been frequently reported. This study examined the possibility that the relationship between usability and appeal are underpinned by implicit perceptions of ease of processing which act as a heuris-tic in making judgments of appeal. Ease of processing was manipulated by varying amount of experience participants gained with icons in a search task prior to judging appeal, as well as varying the familiarity and visual complexity of the icons presented. These manipulations sys-tematically affected response times in the search task (an objective measure of usability). The effects observed in appeal judgments followed the same pattern as for search times, demonstrat-ing that ease of processing predicts judgments of appeal. This suggests that our understanding of interface appeal needs to be predicated on an appreciation of the factors affecting the ease with which information on an interface is processed.

http://www.springer.com/lncs%20%20http://www.springer.com/series/7899

Source: Manual

Preferred by: Sine McDougall