skip to main content
10.1145/1753326.1753337acmconferencesArticle/Chapter ViewAbstractPublication PageschiConference Proceedingsconference-collections
research-article

Effects of interior bezels of tiled-monitor large displays on visual search, tunnel steering, and target selection

Published: 10 April 2010 Publication History

Abstract

Tiled-monitor large displays are widely used in various application domains. However, how their interior bezels affect user performance and behavior has not been fully understood. We conducted three controlled experiments to investigate effects of tiled-monitor interior bezels on visual search, straight-tunnel steering, and target selection tasks. The conclusions of our paper are: 1) interior bezels do not affect visual search time nor error rate; however, splitting objects across bezels is detrimental to search accuracy, 2) interior bezels are detrimental to straight-tunnel steering, but not to target selection. In addition, we discuss how inte-rior bezels affect user behaviors, and suggest guidelines for effectively using tiled-monitor large displays and designing user interfaces suited to them.

References

[1]
Accot, J. & Zhai, S. (1997) Beyond Fitts' law: models for trajectory-based HCI tasks. ACM CHI, 295--302.
[2]
Ball, R. & North, C. (2005) An analysis of user behavior on high-resolution tiled displays. IFIP International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction, 350--364.
[3]
Ball, R. & North, C. (2007) Effects of tiled high-resolution display on basic visualization and navigation. ACM CHI Extended Abstracts, 1196--1199.
[4]
Ball, R., North, C., & Bowman, D. (2007) Move to improve: promoting physical navigation to increase user performance with large displays. ACM CHI, 191--200.
[5]
Baudisch, P., Cutrell, E., Hinckley, K., & Gruen, R. (2004) Mouse ether: accelerating the acquisition of targets across multi-monitor displays. ACM CHI, 1379--1382.
[6]
Birnholtz, J. P., Grossman, T., Mak, C., & Balakrishnan, R. (2007) An exploratory study of input configuration and group process in a negotiation task using a large display. ACM CHI, 91--100.
[7]
Forlines, C., & Balakrishnan, R., (2009). Improving visual search with image segmentation. ACM CHI, 1093--1102.
[8]
Fitts, P. (1954) The information capacity of the human motor system in controlling the amplitude of movement. Journal of Experimental Psychology 47, 381--391.
[9]
Grudin, J. (2001) Partitioning digital worlds: focal and peripheral awareness in multiple monitor use. ACM CHI, 458--465.
[10]
HyperWall. http://www.nas.nasa.gov/Groups/VisTech/hyperwall/.
[11]
Mackinlay, J. D. and Heer, J. (2004). Wideband displays: mitigating multiple monitor seams. In CHI '04 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems . CHI '04. ACM, New York, NY, 1521--1524.
[12]
Robertson, G., Czerwinski, M., Baudisch, P., Meyers, B., Robbins, D., Smith, G., & Tan, D. (2005) The large-display user experience. IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications 25 (4), 44--51.
[13]
Swaminathan, K. & Sato, S. (1997) Interaction design for large displays. Interactions 4 (1), 15--24.
[14]
Tan, D. & Czerwinski, M (2003). Effects of visual separation and physical discontinuities when distributing information across multiple displays. OZCHI Conference for the Computer-Human Interaction Special Interest Group of the Ergonomics Society of Australia, 184--191.
[15]
Tan, D., Czerwinski, M., & Robertson, G. (2003) Women go with the (optical) flow. ACM CHI, 209--215.
[16]
Tan, D., Gergle, D., Scupelli, P., & Pausch, R. (2003) With similar visual angles, larger displays improve spatial performance. ACM CHI, 217--224.
[17]
Tan, D., Gergle, D., Scupelli, P., & Pausch, R. (2004) Physically large displays improve path integration in 3D virtual navigation. ACM CHI, 439--446.
[18]
Wolfe, J. (1998). Visual search. In Pashler, H. (Ed.), Attention, Psychology Press.
[19]
Yost, B., Haciahmetoglu, Y., & North, C. (2007) Beyond visual acuity: the perceptual scalability of information visualizations for large displays. ACM CHI, 101--111.

Cited By

View all

Index Terms

  1. Effects of interior bezels of tiled-monitor large displays on visual search, tunnel steering, and target selection

    Recommendations

    Comments

    Information & Contributors

    Information

    Published In

    cover image ACM Conferences
    CHI '10: Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
    April 2010
    2690 pages
    ISBN:9781605589299
    DOI:10.1145/1753326
    Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

    Sponsors

    Publisher

    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 10 April 2010

    Permissions

    Request permissions for this article.

    Check for updates

    Author Tags

    1. interior bezels
    2. target selection
    3. tiled-monitor large display
    4. tunnel steering
    5. visual search

    Qualifiers

    • Research-article

    Conference

    CHI '10
    Sponsor:

    Acceptance Rates

    Overall Acceptance Rate 6,199 of 26,314 submissions, 24%

    Upcoming Conference

    CHI 2025
    ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
    April 26 - May 1, 2025
    Yokohama , Japan

    Contributors

    Other Metrics

    Bibliometrics & Citations

    Bibliometrics

    Article Metrics

    • Downloads (Last 12 months)24
    • Downloads (Last 6 weeks)2
    Reflects downloads up to 09 Jan 2025

    Other Metrics

    Citations

    Cited By

    View all

    View Options

    Login options

    View options

    PDF

    View or Download as a PDF file.

    PDF

    eReader

    View online with eReader.

    eReader

    Media

    Figures

    Other

    Tables

    Share

    Share

    Share this Publication link

    Share on social media