| CZERWINSKI, M., TAN,D.S.,AND ROBERTSON, G. G. 2002. Women take a wider view. In Proceedings of the CHI 2002 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 195--202. |
....screens and higher resolu tion enhance the viewing experience by allowing for deeper immersion. Recent research shows that a wider field of view can lead to increased performance in productivity tasks [2]. Over the past years, industry has been addressing the resulting demand by offering displays of steadily increasing resolution, reaching resolutions of over nine million pixels (IBM T220 display) Although high resolution is desirable for a variety of applications, it results in an ongoing ....
Czerwinski, M., Tan, D.S., and Robertson, G.G. Women take a wider view. In Proceedings of CHI `02 (Minneapolis, MN, Apr. 2002). ACM, NY, 195--202.
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CZERWINSKI, M., TAN,D.S.,AND ROBERTSON, G. G. 2002. Women take a wider view. In Proceedings of the CHI 2002 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 195--202.
No context found.
Czerwinski, M., Tan, D.S., & Robertson, G.G. (2002). Women take a wider view. Proceedings of CHI 2002, 195-202.
No context found.
Czerwinski, M., Tan, D.S., & Robertson, G.G. (2002). Women take a wider view. Proceedings of CHI 2002, 195-202.
No context found.
Czerwinski, M., Tan, D.S., & Robertson, G.G. (2002). Women take a wider view. Proceedings of CHI 2002, 195-202.
.... Human Factors, Performance Keywords: Large displays, optical flow, field of view, gender, spatial abilities, user study INTRODUCTION Published reports suggest that males significantly outperform females in navigating both real and 3D virtual environments (VEs) In a recent series of work [10,32], researchers explored the factors that contribute to this gender difference as well as proposed principles for designing systems to aid effective navigation. They demonstrated that, although large displays coupled with wide fields of view improved performance in the overall population, such ....
....the effects of optical flow in navigation through VEs, we used a spatial memory task in which participants first learned their way through a complex environment and were then tested for their memory of the route to the target location. Using this paradigm, we replicate and extend previous findings [10], demonstrating that observed benefits come from the presence of optical flow cues during navigation, cues better afforded by wider fields of view on large displays (Figure 1) Additionally, we show that the effect is tied to gender and not necessarily spatial ability. The contribution of these ....
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Czerwinski, M., Tan, D.S., Robertson, G.G. (2002). Women take a wider view. Proceedings of CHI 2002, ACM Press, 195-202.
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Czerwinski, M., Tan, D. and Robertson, G., 2002,Women Take a Wider View, CHI'02, Minneapolis, MN.
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Czerwinski, M., Tan, D. S., & Robertson, G. G. Women Take a Wider View. In Proc. CHI '02, pp. 195-202.
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