| MacKenzie, S., Riddersma, S., 1994. Effects of output display and control--display gain on human performance in interactive systems. Behaviour and Information Technology 1 (3), 328--337. |
....due to the extensive training required. Mouse Acceleration Prior to reporting our evaluation, it is necessary to summarise some low level details of mouse operation. Mouse motion is normally controlled by one or two userconfigurable parameters that determine the mapping ( control display gain [12]) between movement of the physical mouse and the corresponding movement of the cursor on the screen. These values are normally termed acceleration and threshold . When the mouse moves slowly, a base mapping between physical mouse motion and cursor movement applies. Normally the default value ....
MacKenzie, IS. and Riddersma, S. Effects of Output Display and Control-Display Gain on Human Performance in Interactive Systems. Behaviour and Information Technology 13, 5, 328--337, 1994.
....the eye to display distance was about 0.75 meters, for the standing position the distance was 1.5 meters. Thus the same targets appeared smaller for the standing position. There is an abundance of inconclusive research on the human performance impact of control display relationships (e.g. [1, 2, 12]) In one study, viewing distance was actually controlled over a range of 1.5 to 8 meters [7] however, no difference was found in the operating characteristics of three remote pointing devices. So, we do not feel this is an issue in the present study. For distances greater than a few meters ....
MacKenzie, I. S., and Riddersma, S. Effects of output display and control-display gain on human performance in interactive systems, Behaviour & Information Technology 13 (1994) 328-337
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MacKenzie, S., Riddersma, S., 1994. Effects of output display and control--display gain on human performance in interactive systems. Behaviour and Information Technology 1 (3), 328--337.
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