A Psychophysical Comparison of Two Styles-Driven Soft Keyboards

Michael Bohan, Chad A. Phipps, Alex Chaparro, Charles G. Halcomb

Research output: Contribution to conferencePresentation

Abstract

This study compared text entry performance of two stylus-driven soft keyboards for use in hand-held computing devices: the QWERTY and the T9. Participants transcribed text presented on a computer screen into a personal digital assistant (PDA) using a stylus and one of these two keyboards. We introduced a new psychophysical technique for measuring transcription rate that provides a composite measure of speed and accuracy. Using this technique, we calculated the maximum transcription rate for each keyboard. The results show that transcription rates were higher for the QWERTY keyboard than for the T9, despite the T9 keyboard’s apparent superior physical characteristics. An ancillary experiment demonstrated that the poorer performance of the T9 layout may
have resulted from an increase in visual scanning time due to perceptual grouping of the letters on the keys.
Together these findings imply that the QWERTY keyboard layout remains the most effective of the currently available designs for stylus tapping on soft keyboards.
Original languageAmerican English
StatePublished - Jun 1999
Externally publishedYes
EventConference on Graphics Interface '99 - Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Duration: Jun 1 1999 → …

Conference

ConferenceConference on Graphics Interface '99
Period6/1/99 → …

Keywords

  • soft keyboards
  • stylus input
  • pen-based computing
  • hand-held devices
  • transcription rate

Disciplines

  • Computer Sciences
  • Graphics and Human Computer Interfaces

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