| Literature DB >> 33916935 |
Miguel L Lourenço1,2, Fátima Lanhoso2, Denis A Coelho3.
Abstract
Prevention of musculoskeletal disorders is supported by use of slanted rather than horizontal pointing devices, but user acceptance of the former may be compromised due to lower perceived ease of use. This study compares subjectively rated usability (N = 37) for three sizes of slanted computer mice and includes a horizontal small conventional device as a reference. For a random subset of the sample (n = 10), objective usability parameters were also elicited. Participants followed a standard protocol which is based on executing graphical pointing, steering, and dragging tasks generated by a purpose-built software. Subjective ratings were collected for each of the four pointing devices tested. The three slanted devices differed in size but were chosen because of an approximately similar slant angle (around 50-60 degrees relative to the horizontal plane). Additionally, effectiveness and efficiency were objectively calculated based on data recorded for the graphical tasks' software for a random subset of the participants (n = 10). The results unveil small differences in preference in some of the subjective usability parameters across hand size groups. This notwithstanding, the objective efficiency results are aligned with the subjective results, indicating consistency with the hypothesis that smaller slanted devices relative to the user's hand size are easier to use than larger ones. Mean values of weighted efficiency recorded in the study range from 68% to 75%, with differences across devices coherent with preference rank orders.Entities:
Keywords: computer mouse; discomfort; ease of use; effectiveness; efficiency; effort; preference; satisfaction; slanted pointing device; usability
Year: 2021 PMID: 33916935 PMCID: PMC8067547 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18083854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Overview of wireless handheld pointing devices (all right-handed) used in the study and under comparison.
| Device. | Small Horizontal | Small Slanted | Medium Slanted | Large Slanted |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brand and model | Microsoft | Moko | CSL | Anker |
| Mobile 1850 | S8 | E.VE | 98ANWVM | |
| Picture |
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| Dimensions | 100.0 × 58.1 × 38.2 | 104.9 × 72.9 × 59.9 | 126.0 × 68.1 × 62.0 | 120 × 62.8 × 74.8 |
| Nr. of Buttons | 3 | 6 | 6 | 5 |
Percentage values for fractional time of use coefficients [2,3,10].
| Pointing Device Operations | Pointing at Large Targets | Pointing at Medium Targets | Pointing at Small Targets | Dragging with Left Button | Dragging with Middle Button | Steering |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fractional time of use coefficient | a | b | c | d | e | f |
| Percentage value | 10.1% | 21.8% | 18.1% | 23.1% | 11.2% | 15.7% |
Figure 1Test tasks (pointing, dragging, and steering).
Hand anthropometry sample statistics (15 female, 22 male) (SD–standard deviation).
| Dimension. | Hand Length [mm] | Hand Width [mm] | Hand Size | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample | Mean | SD | Mean | SD | Mean | |
| Below hand size overall mean ( | 167.7 | 9.1 | 76.5 | 4.2 | 244.2 | |
| Overall (N = 37) | 179.6 | 11.7 | 82.5 | 82.5 | 262.1 | |
| Above hand size overall mean ( | 186.9 | 5.4 | 86.2 | 3.3 | 273.1 | |
Small (n = 14) and Large (n = 23) hand size groups (below and above the hand size parameter mean for the entire sample) and preference ranking among devices for various subjective dimensions.
| Dimension | Hand Size Group | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | Kendall’s W ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Less discomfort preference | Small | Small slanted | Small horizontal | Medium slanted | Large slanted | 0.188 (0.048) |
| Large | Small horizontal | Small slanted | Large slanted | Medium slanted | 0.025 (0.628) | |
| Effectiveness preference | Small | Small horizontal | Tie between small and medium slanted | Large slanted | 0.294 (0.006) | |
| Large | Small horizontal | Medium slanted | Small slanted | Large slanted | 0.124 (0.035) | |
| Performance preference | Small | Small horizontal | Small slanted | Medium slanted | Large slanted | 0.239 (0.018) |
| Large | Small horizontal | Small slanted | Medium slanted | Large slanted | 0.143 (0.020) | |
| Less effort preference | Small | Small slanted | Small horizontal | Large slanted | Medium slanted | 0.173 (0.063) |
| Large | Small horizontal | Small slanted | Medium slanted | Large slanted | 0.025 (0.638) | |
| Aesthetic preference | Small | Small slanted | Medium slanted | Large slanted | Small horizontal | 0.367 (0.001) |
| Large | Large slanted | Medium slanted | Small slanted | Small horizontal | 0.186 (0.005) | |
| Ease of use preference | Small | Small horizontal | Small slanted | Medium slanted | Large Slanted | 0.198 (0.040) |
| Large | Small horizontal | Medium slanted | Large Slanted | Small slanted | 0.182 (0.006) | |
| Satisfaction preference | Small | Small slanted | Small horizontal | Medium slanted | Large slanted | 0.190 (0.047) |
| Large | Small horizontal | Medium slanted | Small slanted | Large slanted | 0.059 (0.257) | |
Figure 2Clustered bar charts of the mean and standard deviation of subjectively rated satisfaction, efficiency, effort, ease of use, forearm discomfort, and hand discomfort by hand size and device [Higher values are more positive than lower values, e.g., satisfaction: 6–Very satisfied; 0–Not satisfied].
Pearson correlation factors (p < 0.001) for the subjective ratings (N = 37).
| Lack of Forearm Discomfort | Ease of Use | Effortlessness | Performance | Satisfaction | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lack of hand discomfort | 0.571 | 0.647 | 0.638 | 0.693 | 0.691 |
| Lack of forearm discomfort | 0.492 | 0.668 | 0.591 | 0.555 | |
| Ease of use | 0.661 | 0.717 | 0.719 | ||
| Effortlessness | 0.780 | 0.741 | |||
| Performance | 0.822 | ||||
Mean weighted efficiency values obtained from purpose-built software [11] recorded objective data for a randomly selected subset of participants (n = 10); (standard deviation shown in parentheses where meaningful).
| Pointing Device | Medium Slanted | Large Slanted | Small Slanted | Small Horizontal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample Subset | |||||
| Selection ( | 69.6% (6.9%) | 71.3% (4.6%) | 72.8% (4.2%) | 73.6% (7.5%) | |
| Large hand size (nmale = 8) | 69.4% (6.6%) | 71.8% (4.8%) | 74.0% (3.7%) | 75.0% (6.9%) | |
| Small hand size (nfemale = 2) | 70.4% (-) | 69.2% (-) | 68.3% (-) | 68.3% (-) | |
Pearson correlation factor values achieving significance (p < 0.05) for the association of objective and subjective usability evaluation measures, restricting to participants with large hand size (n = 8).
| Variable | Ease of Use | Effortlessness | Performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weighted efficiency | r = 0.418 ( | ||
| Efficiency of pointing large | r = 0.375 ( | r = 0.392 ( | r = 0.405 ( |
| Efficiency of steering | r = 0.395 ( |