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CHI
2006
ACM

Clipping lists and change borders: improving multitasking efficiency with peripheral information design

15 years 26 days ago
Clipping lists and change borders: improving multitasking efficiency with peripheral information design
Information workers often have to balance many tasks and interruptions. In this work, we explore peripheral display techniques that improve multitasking efficiency by helping users maintain task flow, know when to resume tasks, and more easily reacquire tasks. Specifically, we compare two abstraction that provide different task information: semantic content extraction, which displays only the most relevant content in a window, and change detection, which signals when a change has occurred in a window (all designed as modifications to Scalable Fabric [17]). Results from our user study suggest that semantic content extraction improves multitasking performance more so than either change detection or our base case of scaling. Results also show that semantic content extraction provides significant benefits to task flow, resumption timing, and reacquisition. We discuss the implication of these findings on the design of peripheral interfaces that support multitasking.
Tara Matthews, Mary Czerwinski, George G. Robertso
Added 30 Nov 2009
Updated 30 Nov 2009
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where CHI
Authors Tara Matthews, Mary Czerwinski, George G. Robertson, Desney S. Tan
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