Title :
A user study comparing head-mounted and stationary displays
Author :
Pausch, Randy ; Shackelford, M. Anne ; Proffitt, Dennis
Author_Institution :
Virginia Univ., Charlottesville, VA, USA
Abstract :
Head-mounted displays, as popularized by virtual reality systems, offer the opportunity to immerse a user in a synthetically generated environment. While there is much anecdotal evidence that this is a qualitative jump in the user interface, there is little quantitative data to establish that emersion improves task performance. The authors present the results of a user study: users performing a generic search task decrease task performance time by roughly half (42% reduction) when they change from a stationary display to a head-mounted display with identical properties (resolution, field-of-view, etc.). A second result is that users who practice with the head-mounted display reduce task completion time by 23% in later trials with the stationary display, suggesting a transfer effect.<>
Keywords :
computer displays; human factors; task analysis; user interfaces; virtual reality; field-of-view; generic search task; head-mounted display; resolution; stationary displays; synthetically generated environment; task completion time; task performance; user interface; user study; virtual reality systems; Application software; Cameras; Centralized control; Computer displays; Layout; Mice; Motion control; Space technology; Virtual environment; Virtual reality;
Conference_Titel :
Virtual Reality, 1993. Proceedings., IEEE 1993 Symposium on Research Frontiers in
Conference_Location :
San Jose, CA, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-4910-0
DOI :
10.1109/VRAIS.1993.378265