Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems - CHI '88 1988
DOI: 10.1145/57167.57171
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Improving the accuracy of touch screens: an experimental evaluation of three strategies

Abstract: A study comparing the speed, accuracy, and user satisfaction of three different touch screen strategies was performed.The purpose of the experiment was to evaluate the merits of the more intricate touch strategies that are possible on touch screens that return a continuous stream of touch data. The results showed that a touch strategy providing continuous feedback until a selection was confirmed had fewer errors than other touch strategies. The implications of the results for touch screens containing small, de… Show more

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Cited by 246 publications
(198 citation statements)
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“…E por não precisar deslocar as mãos e o olhar para outros dispositivos de entrada de dados, como mouse e teclado, as telas sensíveis ao toque se tornam intuitivas e de fácil utilização, principalmente para iniciantes. Sherr (1988), Greenstein e Arnaut (1988), Beringer e Peterson (1985), Potter et al (1988Potter et al ( , 1989, Sears e Shneiderman (1991) apresentam estudos que apontam a eficiência das telas touchscreen, porém não deixam de salientar a sua falta de precisão para tarefas de alta resolução.…”
Section: Pessoas Idosas E a Tecnologia Touchscreenunclassified
“…E por não precisar deslocar as mãos e o olhar para outros dispositivos de entrada de dados, como mouse e teclado, as telas sensíveis ao toque se tornam intuitivas e de fácil utilização, principalmente para iniciantes. Sherr (1988), Greenstein e Arnaut (1988), Beringer e Peterson (1985), Potter et al (1988Potter et al ( , 1989, Sears e Shneiderman (1991) apresentam estudos que apontam a eficiência das telas touchscreen, porém não deixam de salientar a sua falta de precisão para tarefas de alta resolução.…”
Section: Pessoas Idosas E a Tecnologia Touchscreenunclassified
“…Potter et al [12] proposed Take-Off that enables pointing adjustment and avoids finger occlusion by showing a cursor slightly above the finger position. One drawback of this technique is that the user does not know the position of the cursor until her/his finger touches the screen.…”
Section: Pointing Techniques For Touch-based Handheld Devicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prior finger-based pointing techniques suffered from two problems, which Shift remedies: the occlusion caused by the hand, and the lack of precision caused by fingers that are larger than many targets. Prior to Shift, the Offset Cursor was a popular design that placed the selection point a standard distance above the finger contact point (Potter et al, 1988;Sears and Shneiderman, 1991). But the Offset Cursor required users to ''aim low'' in anticipation of the constant offset, ruining the possibility of direct-touch for large targets.…”
Section: Thumb-and Finger-based Mobile Device Interactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In order to isolate the physical performance of hand postures on a mobile device, we had to create an experiment apparatus that circumvented the two wellknown perceptual problems of direct-touch on touch screens, namely the occlusion caused by the user's hand and the unwieldy ''fat finger'' that creates an uncertain touch location (Potter et al, 1988;Sears and Shneiderman, 1991;Vogel and Baudisch, 2007;Wigdor et al, 2007). We argue that innovations in display and sensing technologies will continue to ameliorate these problems, and therefore they should not confound our results.…”
Section: Apparatusmentioning
confidence: 99%