Shore '00: Student HCI Online Research Experiments

University of Maryland

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A Comparison of Voice Controlled and Mouse Controlled Web Browsing

Authors:

Kevin Christian-kevin@cs.umd.edu
Bill Kules-wmk@takoma-software.com
Adel Youssef-adel@cs.umd.edu

Abstract

Voice controlled web browsers allow users to navigate by speaking the text of a link or an associated number instead of clicking with a mouse. One such browser is Conversa, by Conversational Computing. This study compared voice browsing with traditional mouse-based browsing. It attempted to identify which of three common hypertext forms (linear slide show, grid/tiled map, and hierarchical menu) are well suited to voice navigation, and whether voice navigation is helped by numbering links. The study shows that voice control adds approximately 50% to the performance time for certain types of tasks. Subjective satisfaction measures indicate that for voice browsing, textual links are preferable to numbered links, but the mouse is still easier to use for general purpose web browsing.



Department of Computer Science: Direct questions and comments to the student editorial team

University of Maryland