This paper describes some basic experiments to see how fast various popular scripting and userinterface languages run on a spectrum of representative tasks. We found enormous variation in performance, depending on many factors, some uncontrollable and even unknowable. There seems to be little hope o
Planning and the user interface: the effects of lockout time and error recovery cost
β Scribed by KENTON P. O'HARA; STEPHEN J. PAYNE
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 245 KB
- Volume
- 50
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1071-5819
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This paper reports three experiments which, through simple user-interface manipulations, examine a prediction derived from a rational analysis of problem solving: that increasing the cost of performing a problem-solving operator will increase the level of planning during problem solving and reduce the level of action in the world. The first experiment uses the slide-jump puzzle to look at the effects of imposing an implementation cost only on the undo operator of the interface to a task. The second experiment looks at problem solving with the eight-puzzle and imposes a system lockout delay after every operator application. In line with the predictions of the rational analysis model, both experiments demonstrate how these different manipulations of implementation cost result in more planning and shorter solution lengths when the operator implementation cost is high. The final experiment again uses a manipulation of lockout time and replicates the effects within the domain of a non-puzzle-like office administration type task.
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