This article presents two studies concerning the role of individual differences in searching through a spatialsemantic virtual environment. In the first study, 10 subjects searched for two topics through a spatial user interface of a semantic space. A strong positive correlation was found between as
Individual differences in virtual environments?Introduction and overview
โ Scribed by Chen, Chaomei ;Czerwinski, Mary ;Macredie, Robert
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 61 KB
- Volume
- 51
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0002-8231
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The practical significance of identifying and accommodating individual differences has been established across a number of fields of research. There is a renewed interest in individual differences due to the advances in virtual environments, especially through farreaching technologies such as information visualization and 3D graphical user interfaces on the World Wide Web. The effects of individual differences on the use of these new technologies are yet to be found out. More fundamentally, theories and methods developed for the earlier generations of information systems are subject to a close examination of their applicability, efficiency, and effectiveness. In this article, we present a brief historical overview of research in individual differences in the context of virtual environments. In particular, we highlight the notion of structure in the perception of individual users of an information system and the role of individuals' abilities to recognize and use such structures to perform various information-intensive tasks. Striking the balance between individuals' abilities and the demanding task for detecting, understanding, and utilizing such structures is an emerging theme across the five articles in this special issue. We outline the approaches and the major findings of these articles with reference to this central theme.
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