|
CMU-HCII-06-101
Human-Computer Interaction Institute
School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
CMU-HCII-06-101
Entering Mathematical Equations Multimodally:
Results on Usability and Interaction Patterns
Lisa Anthony, Jie Yang, Kenneth R. Koedinger
March 2006
CMU-HCII-06-101.pdf
Keywords: Pen-based interfaces, multimodal interfaces, mathematics
interfaces, equation entry and editing, usability, evaluation
Current interfaces for entering mathematical equations on computers
are arguably limited and cumbersome. Mathematical notations have evolved
to aid symbolic thinking and yet text-based interfaces
relying on keyboard-and-mouse input do not take advantage of the
natural two-dimensional aspects of mathematical equations. Due to its
similarities to paper-based mathematics, pen-based handwriting input may
be faster, more efficient, and more preferred for entering mathematics on
computers. This paper presents an empirical usability study that tests this
hypothesis. We also explored a multimodal input method combining handwriting
and speech because we hypothesize it may aid both computer recognition and
user cognition. Novice users were indeed faster in handwriting and enjoyed
the handwriting modality more than a standard keyboard-and-mouse mathematics
interface, especially as equation length and complexity increased. The
multimodal handwriting-plus-speech method was faster and better liked than
the keyboard-and-mouse method and was not much worse in these aspects than
handwriting alone. In our domain, users' selfcorrection of errors tends to
be easier in handwriting than with the keyboard; however, the overall
average error rate was slightly higher in these modalities. In addition,
users' speech while writing differed from when speaking alone. Finally,
user errors in handwriting and speech were nonoverlapping, a fact which
a multimodal recognition system could use to improve performance.
23 pages
|