Retroactive Transfer Phenomena in Alternating User Interfaces

Publication date

2020-04-21

Authors

Raissi, Reyhaneh
Dimara, EvanthiaORCID 0000-0001-5212-7888ISNI 0000000506363504
Berry, Jacquelyn H.
Gray, Wayne D.
Bailly, Gilles

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

We investigated retroactive transfer when users alternate between different interfaces. Retroactive transfer is the influence of a newly learned interface on users' performance with a previously learned interface. In an interview study, participants described their experiences when alternating between different interfaces, e.g. Different operating systems, devices or techniques. Negative retroactive transfer related to text entry was the most frequently reported incident. We then reported a laboratory experiment that investigated the impact of similarity between two abstract keyboard layouts, and the number of alternations between them, on retroactive interference. Results indicated that even small changes in the interference interface produced a significant performance drop for the entire previously learned interface. The amplitude of this performance drop decreases with the number of alternations. We suggest that retroactive transfer should receive more attention in HCI, as the ubiquitous nature of interactions across applications and systems requires users to increasingly alternate between similar interfaces.

Keywords

keyboard layout, retroactive interference, skill transfer, Taverne

Citation

Raissi, R, Dimara, E, Berry, J H, Gray, W D & Bailly, G 2020, Retroactive Transfer Phenomena in Alternating User Interfaces. in CHI '20: Proceedings of the 2020 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. Association for Computing Machinery, New York, pp. 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1145/3313831.3376538