The Effects of Task, Task Mapping, and Layout Space on User Performance in Information-Rich Virtual Environments

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TR Number

TR-06-12

Date

2006

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Department of Computer Science, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University

Abstract

How should abstract information be displayed in Information-Rich Virtual Environments (IRVEs)? There are a variety of techniques available, and it is important to determine which techniques help foster a user’s understanding both within and between abstract and spatial information types. Our evaluation compared two such techniques: Object Space and Display Space. Users strongly prefer Display Space over Object Space, and those who use Display Space may perform better. Display Space was faster and more accurate than Object Space for tasks comparing abstract information. Object Space was more accurate for comparisons of spatial information. These results suggest that for abstract criteria, visibility is a more important requirement than perceptual coupling by depth and association cues. They also support the value of perceptual coupling for tasks with spatial criteria.

Description

Keywords

Human-computer interaction, Information visualization, Virtual environments

Citation