DocumentCode
2411915
Title
An investigation of finger versus stylus input in medical scenarios
Author
Holzinger, Andreas ; Höller, Martin ; Schedlbauer, Martin ; Urlesberger, Berndt
Author_Institution
Res. Unit HCI4MED, Inst. Med. Inf., Graz
fYear
2008
fDate
23-26 June 2008
Firstpage
433
Lastpage
438
Abstract
An in-situ study on the routine work of clinicians at Graz University Hospital was carried out in order to evaluate the input method preferences. We conducted several experiments consisting of selection tasks on two different types of tablet PCs, with the end users in three experimental conditions: sitting, standing and walking. The results show that the medical staff performed better when using stylus operated device. In almost all tests, subjects performed the selection tasks significantly faster and more accurately (p < 0.001) with the stylus operated device, even though it had a smaller screen and therefore the targets were smaller. The only exception was the selection performance when seated, where no significant difference was found (p = 0.06). However, the error rate was significantly lower for stylus input for all experiment conditions. This result is also supported by the analysis of the questionnaires, where it was found that almost all subjects preferred stylus input.
Keywords
health care; human factors; interactive devices; medical information systems; notebook computers; user interfaces; Graz University Hospital; finger operated device; health care; human factors; input device preference evaluation; medical information system; stylus operated device; tablet PC; user interface; Documentation; Fingers; Hospitals; Information technology; Legged locomotion; Medical services; Mice; Mobile computing; Personal communication networks; User interfaces; Human performance; input device evaluation; medical workflows; tablet PC; touch selection;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Technology Interfaces, 2008. ITI 2008. 30th International Conference on
Conference_Location
Dubrovnik
ISSN
1330-1012
Print_ISBN
978-953-7138-12-7
Electronic_ISBN
1330-1012
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ITI.2008.4588449
Filename
4588449
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