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Reading continuous text from a one-line visual display

โœ Scribed by Andrew F. Monk


Book ID
104139898
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1984
Weight
505 KB
Volume
21
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7373

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โœฆ Synopsis


Continuous text may be presented via a one-line visual display by dividing it into "frames", each of which is displayed for some specified time. Two different approaches to determine the contents of these frames can be distinguished: character-stepped display and word-stepped display. In the former the start of each frame is "stepped" some number of characters through the text for each frame presented. Viewed in this way the text appears to be moving jerkily behind a slot. In a word-stepped display the contents of each frame depend on word boundaries (e.g. having a separate word in each frame).

Experiments are described which compare different ways of displaying text. Readers can cope with character-and word-stepped displays at high rates of presentation. The parameter which was identified as having most influence on performance was the expected proportion of words occurring whole on some frame.


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There are a number of applications in consumer and industrial product environments in which there is a need to display a message in a restricted space. Two general display methods were compared in the present research using an eight-character horizontal display. Text appeared either as a sequence of