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2002 | OriginalPaper | Buchkapitel

How People Recognise Previously Seen Web Pages from Titles, URLs and Thumbnails

verfasst von : Shaun Kaasten, Saul Greenberg, Christopher Edwards

Erschienen in: People and Computers XVI - Memorable Yet Invisible

Verlag: Springer London

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The selectable lists of pages offered by Web browsers’ history and bookmark facilities ostensibly make it easier for people to return to previously visited pages. These lists show the pages as abstractions, typically as truncated titles and URLs, and more rarely as small thumbnail images. Yet we have little knowledge of how recognisable these representations really are. Consequently, we carried out a study that compared the recognisability of thumbnails between various image sizes, and of titles and URLs between various string sizes. Our results quantify the trade-off between the size of these representations and their recognisability. These findings directly contribute to how history and bookmark lists should be designed.

Metadaten
Titel
How People Recognise Previously Seen Web Pages from Titles, URLs and Thumbnails
verfasst von
Shaun Kaasten
Saul Greenberg
Christopher Edwards
Copyright-Jahr
2002
Verlag
Springer London
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-0105-5_15