An empirical investigation of the novice experience with soft keyboards

Abstract
An experiment with 12 participants tested text entry rates on two sizes of soft keyboards with either a Qwerty layout or a layout presenting a randomized letter arrangement after each tap. The randomized layout simulated the novice experience by requiring users to visually scan the layout for each tap to find the intended letter. Rates for the Qwerty layouts were about 20 wpm with no significant difference between the large and small size. Rates for both sizes of the randomized layouts were very low, about 5.4 wpm. This is the expected walk-up text entry rate with a soft keyboard bearing an unfamiliar layout. This empirical result allows us to reject a previous model of novice interaction that used Fitts' law for stylus movement and the Hick-Hyman law for visual scan time.

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