Intuitive use of tangible toys


Autoria(s): Desai, Shital; Blackler, Alethea; Popovic, Vesna
Contribuinte(s)

Popovic, Vesna

Blackler, Alethea L.

Luh, Ding-Bang

Nimkulrat, Nithikul

Kraal, Ben J.

Nagai, Yukari

Data(s)

02/11/2015

Resumo

Interfaces for children have continued to evolve in terms of complexity, with toys ranging from traditional tangible interfaces to apps with digital interfaces and hybrid toys with mixed physical and digital interfaces. However, there is limited research done to investigate their potential for intuitive use. This research study compares a tangible toy and an equivalent toy in the digital world (app) for intuitive use. Non-parametric Mann-Whitney U test results showed that the tangible toy was more intuitive than the intangible counter part. Tangible systems are less complex to use and they require less time to encode and retrieve associated knowledge to use them intuitively. They are associated with low domain transfer distance and easily discoverable features. Intangible interfaces, on the other ha nd, require greater complexity and time to encode and retrieve associated experiential knowledge. Intangibles are associated with larger domain transfer distance and undiscoverable features which affects their intuitive use. Design implications and future work are discussed, emphasising the need for investigating aspects that make tangible systems intuitive to use.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/86582/

Publicador

IASDR (The International Association of Societies of Design Research)

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/86582/1/IASDR2015_final.pdf

http://iasdr2015.com/

Desai, Shital, Blackler, Alethea, & Popovic, Vesna (2015) Intuitive use of tangible toys. In Popovic, Vesna, Blackler, Alethea L., Luh, Ding-Bang, Nimkulrat, Nithikul, Kraal, Ben J., & Nagai, Yukari (Eds.) Proceedings of the 6th IASDR (The International Association of Societies of Design Research Congress), IASDR (The International Association of Societies of Design Research), Brisbane, Australia, pp. 522-540.

Direitos

Copyright 2015 [please consult the authors]

Fonte

School of Design; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #080602 Computer-Human Interaction #120304 Digital and Interaction Design #Intuitive Interaction #Tangibles #Intangibles #Sensorimotor
Tipo

Conference Paper