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
Reading text presented on a small display
β Scribed by James F. Juola; Alp Tiritoglu; John Pleunis
- Book ID
- 102638179
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 386 KB
- Volume
- 26
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-6870
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
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 small right-to-left jumps ('leading'), or as a sequence of whole or partword patterns (rapid serial visual presentations, RSVP). Upper-case versus lower-case letters and slow (171 words per minute, wpm) versus fast (260 wpm) presentation rates were compared. In all conditions, sentences were read more accurately in the RSVP format than in the leading format. Recommendations for future displays of verbal messages are diiussed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Two studies using the methods of experimental psychology assessed the effects of two types of text presentation (page-by-page vs. scrolling) on participants' performance while reading and revising texts. Greater facilitative effects of the page-by-page presentation were observed in both tasks. The p