CHI '04 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2004
DOI: 10.1145/985921.986082
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A reduced QWERTY keyboard for mobile text entry

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Cited by 46 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…One hand therefore fulfills the role of both hands. In a more recent approach the QWERTY keyboard is collapsed into one line of keys (Green et al, 2004), with the purpose to save space and transfer existing QWERTY typing skills. Another widely used QWERTY text entry strategy is two-finger typing (Mackenzie and Soukoreff, 2002a).…”
Section: Qwerty and Typing Skillmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One hand therefore fulfills the role of both hands. In a more recent approach the QWERTY keyboard is collapsed into one line of keys (Green et al, 2004), with the purpose to save space and transfer existing QWERTY typing skills. Another widely used QWERTY text entry strategy is two-finger typing (Mackenzie and Soukoreff, 2002a).…”
Section: Qwerty and Typing Skillmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The results obtained during the experiments show a significant decrease in the number of movements. Note that other experiments have reached the following conclusion: a valid user may reach 10.4 words per minute after 10 hours of training with a T9-type keyboard [10]. We are far from this performance, because we chose to do a limited number of tests to remain as close to reality as possible due to operations performed by users with cerebral palsy.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Matias et al removed some keys to reduce the size of a keyboard to half of a standard keyboard, and achieved higher typing speed than using a compact keyboard [6]. Green et al went further by removing more keys to achieve a "stick keyboard" that is only a 1/4 of the size of a standard keyboard [7]. They showed that typists could reach half of the typical typing speed with lexicon-based disambiguation.…”
Section: Haptic Keyclick Feedback Improves Typing Speed and Reduces Tmentioning
confidence: 99%