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Fifth International Conference on Information Visualisation (IV'01)
A Study of Three Browser History Mechanisms for Web Navigation
London, England
July 25-July 27
ISBN: 0-7695-1195-3
Tamer Nadeem, University of Maryland
Bill Killam, UserWorks, Inc.
Abstract: Finding a previously visited page during web navigation is a very common and important process. Although most commercial browsers incorporate a history mechanism, when accessing pages that were recently visited users still rely mainly on the "Back" button. In this paper we studied the effectiveness of visually enhanced history browser mechanisms on web navigation. We used three different history mechanisms as the experiment treatments. Twenty-one college students were the subjects of the experimental trials. With a between subject design, three experimental groups were equally divided according to subject profiles. Users read and completed the given scenario. A quiz was given to measure user performance on the tested mechanism. At the end of the quiz, a subjective questionnaire was given to measure user satisfaction. The results showed that there is a significant statistical difference among the three mechanisms. The more visually enhanced history mechanism proved to be more effective in web browsing.
Citation:
Tamer Nadeem, Bill Killam, "A Study of Three Browser History Mechanisms for Web Navigation," iv, pp.0013, Fifth International Conference on Information Visualisation (IV'01), 2001
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