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Select the Proper Kinds of Windows

Select the Proper Kinds of Windows. Human Task Switching. Types of Task Switching Interruption Need to find missing process or information Human initiated rest Effect of Task Switching Cognitive attention lost Cognitive load increases. Task Switching - Interruptions.

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Select the Proper Kinds of Windows

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  1. Select the Proper Kinds of Windows

  2. Human Task Switching • Types of Task Switching • Interruption • Need to find missing process or information • Human initiated rest • Effect of Task Switching • Cognitive attention lost • Cognitive load increases

  3. Task Switching - Interruptions • For today’s Information Worker • interruptions are part of individual’s day • many people are interrupted 10 timesin each short task • interruptions require the individual to: • either search for their location in the task they are doing • or mentally record where they are in the task

  4. Task Switching - Self initiated • People also interrupt their own task • many tasks are complex enough that humans lose track of where they are and restart them • many tasks are cognitively demanding and require mental rests • humans switch to reading their email or more routine tasks for this rest

  5. Task Switching--Incomplete Preparation • People do not organize and plan their work for the week, day, hour except in a very general way • People carry out the next detailed part of their task based on the visual and auditory cues that are currently present in their task

  6. Knowledge - Norman • In the head...and in the world • We behave precisely without precise knowledge • Information is in the world • Natural constraints are present • Cultural constraints are present • Precise memory is not required

  7. Knowledge in the Head vs. in the World

  8. Incomplete Preparation • Example • Cooking potatoes: after the potatoes have been washed, we use the visual cue of the washed potatoes with skins on to tell us we have to peel them • Similarly, when they are peeled, we know the next step is to cook them

  9. Incomplete Preparation • Use of external cues to tell us where we are in the task is known as Situated Action • Reliance on situated action means that we often remember we need a crucial piece of information only in the middle of the task

  10. Incomplete Preparation • For example, in cooking the potatoes, we may suddenly realize we need salt and have to run to the store to get salt • In short, we are not really forgetful; it is cognitively easier for us to do the task via situated action then to plan ahead • This leads to lots of task switching

  11. Effect of Task Switching • Loss of task attention • Tasks require place-keepers for people to return to them at the point where they switched away • If the place-keepers are not available visually, they have to be maintained mentally • Even with visual place-keepers, there is some mental overhead in task switching

  12. Task Switching Management • Because task switching is inherent in the social and psychological makeup of human work, humans have developed strategies for handling it • they lay out their work on a surface to be able to move from task to task • they create patterns in their layout to help them find and return to a particular task

  13. How People Manage their Desktops • People have done studies of how people manage their desk in hopes of providing computer tools to support the task • People are either orderly or very messy, but the real issue here is that people have a visual sense of the layout of papers • They use this visual picture to help them find things

  14. How People Manage their Desktops • People lay out items on their desk as reminders • People lay out items on their desk so they can do task switching • People lay out items on their desk so they can see the relationships among the items

  15. Windows: Support forTask Switching • In the beginning, people had one application running on their computer at a time • Because we are constantly switching tasks, this became intolerable • exit program 1 • enter program 2 • exit program 2 • enter program 1 • Windows solve this problem

  16. Windows: Our Virtual Messy Desk! • People use windows exactly like they use stacks of papers on their desks • But: task switching with windows is often like searching a very messy desk • built by programmers for programmers • windows appear in strange places and inconvenient sizes • like the QWERTY keyboard, we now mustlive with them

  17. Chart-o-matic X Windows • Overview • Components • Presentation styles • Types • Organization • Operations

  18. Some Uses of Windows • Support for human user • Provide knowledge in the world • Reflect the way people work • Presentation of information • Different levels, kinds, and sequences • Different sources • Performing more than one task • Reminding • Monitoring

  19. Windows Components

  20. Window Components--Win 98

  21. Window Presentation Styles • Tiled • Single task activities • Tasks with little window manipulation • Novice or inexperienced users • Overlapping and cascading • Switching between tasks • Window manipulation needed • Expert or experienced users ? Disadvantages of each type

  22. Tiled Limited screen size Open windows change size & position Windows get tiny Look crowded Less user control Overlapping More complex, possibly distracting Information gets hidden or lost Users don’t always recognize 3-D model Disadvantages of Presentation Styles

  23. Types of Windows • Primary or Application • Secondary, Document, or Supplemental • Property Windows • Dialog Boxes • Modal or Modeless • Message Boxes • Palette Windows • Pop-Up Windows (e.g., paper clip guy)

  24. Property Windows • Displays accessible properties of object • Information is grouped using tabbed pages

  25. Dialog Boxes • Get additional information from user • Common dialogs • Open • Save • Print

  26. Message Boxes • Provides information to the user • Standard types • Information • Warning • Critical error

  27. Palette Windows • Presents a collection of controls-- graphical or pictorial • Mutually exclusive choices--like radio buttons • Palettes • Toolbars

  28. Pop-Up Windows • Displays additional information • Most standard secondary window components omitted • Example: tooltips

  29. Types of Windows • Single Document Interface (SDI) • Multiple Document Interface (MDI) • Workspaces • Workbooks • Projects

  30. MDI Windows

  31. Organizing Windows • Organize windows to support user tasks • Rather than organizing by features, functions, or ease of implementation • Minimize the number of windows needed to perform a task • Focus on common tasks

  32. Sizing Windows • Large enough to • Contain expected information • Avoid hiding important information • Avoid crowding • Otherwise, as small as possible! • Text - about 12 lines • Alphanumeric - about 7 lines

  33. Window Operations • General Guidelines • Focus on ease of use and learning • Less is more • Give users control / ability to tailor • Especially for overlapping windows! • Keyboard Control/Mouseless Operation Opening…Placement…Separation…Moving… Resizing…Shuffling…Closing

  34. Limitations of Windows • Little research on window design/use • Hardware limitations • Human limitations

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