Mouse movements of motion-impaired users

A submovement analysis

Conference Paper (2004)
Author(s)

Faustina Hwang (University of Cambridge)

S. Keates (IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Centre)

Pat Langdon (University of Cambridge)

P.J. John Clarkson (University of Cambridge)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1145/1028630.1028649
More Info
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Publication Year
2004
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Pages (from-to)
102-109
ISBN (print)
['158113911X', '9781581139112']

Abstract

Understanding human movement is key to improving input devices and interaction techniques. This paper presents a study of mouse movements of motion-impaired users, with an aim to gaining a better understanding of impaired movement. The cursor trajectories of six motion-impaired users and three able-bodied users are studied according to their submovement structure. Several aspects of the movement are studied, including the frequency and duration of pauses between submovements, verification times, the number of submovements, the peak speed of submovements and the accuracy of submovements in two-dimensions. Results include findings that some motion-impaired users pause more often and for longer than able-bodied users, require up to five times more submovements to complete the same task, and exhibit a correlation between error and peak submovement speed that does not exist for able-bodied users.

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