Steering law

Steering law

The steering law is a predictive model of how quickly one may navigate, or "steer", through a 2-dimensional tunnel. The tunnel can be thought of as a path or trajectory on a plane that has an associated thickness or width, where the width can vary along the tunnel. The goal of a steering task is to navigate from one end of the tunnel to the other as quickly as possible, without touching the boundaries of the tunnel. A real world example that approximates this task is driving a car down a road that may have twists and turns, where the car must navigate the road as quickly as possible without touching the sides of the road. The steering law predicts both the instantaneous speed at which we may navigate the tunnel, and the total time required to navigate the entire tunnel.

The steering law has been independently discovered and studied three times (Rashevsky, 1959; Drury, 1971; Accot and Zhai, 1997). Its most recent discovery has been within the human-computer interaction community, which has resulted in the most general mathematical formulation of the law.

The steering law in human-computer interaction

Within human-computer interaction, the law was rediscovered by Johnny Accot and Shumin Zhai, who mathematically derived it in a novel way from Fitts' law using integral calculus, experimentally verified it for a class of tasks, and developed the most general mathematical statement of it. Some researchers within this community have sometimes refer to the law as the Accot-Zhai steering law or Accot's law (Accot is pronounced "ah-caught" in English and "ah-koh" in French). In this context, the steering law is a predictive model of human movement, concerning the speed and total time with which a user may steer a pointing device (such as a mouse or stylus) through a 2D tunnel presented on a screen (i.e. with a bird's eye view of the tunnel), where the user must travel from one end of the path to the other as quickly as possible, while staying within the confines of the path. One potential practical application of this law is in modelling a user's performance in navigating a hierarchical cascading menu.

Many researchers in human-computer interaction, including Accot himself, find it surprising or even amazing that the steering law model predicts performance as well as it does, given the almost purely mathematical way in which it was derived. Some consider this a testament to the robustness of Fitts' law.

In its general form, the steering law can be expressed as

:T=a + b int_{C} frac{ds}{W(s)}

where "T" is the average time to navigate through the path, "C" is the path parameterized by "s", "W(s)" is the width of the path at "s", and "a" and "b" are experimentally fitted constants. In general, the path may have a complicated curvilinear shape (such as a spiral) with variable thickness "W(s)".

Simpler paths allow for mathematical simplifications of the general form of the law. For example, if the path is a straight tunnel of constant width "W", the equation reduces to

:T=a + b frac{A}{W}

where "A" is the length of the path. We see, especially in this simplified form, a "speed-accuracy" tradeoff, somewhat similar to that in Fitts' law.

We can also differentiate both sides of the integral equation with respect to "s" to obtain the local, or instantaneous, form of the law:

:frac{ds}{dT} = frac{W(s)}{b}

which says that the instantaneous speed of the user is proportional to the width of the tunnel. This makes intuitive sense if we consider the analogous task of driving a car down a road: the wider the road, the faster we can drive and still stay on the road, even if there are curves in the road.

Derivation of the model from Fitts' law

This derivation is only meant as a high level sketch. It lacks the illustrations of, and may differ in detail from, the derivation given by Accot and Zhai (1997).

Assume that the time required for goal passing (i.e. passing a pointer through a goal at distance "A" and of width "W",oriented perpendicular to the axis of motion) can be modeled with this form of Fitts' law:

:T_ ext{goal} = b log_2 left( frac{A}{W} + 1 ight)

Then, a straight tunnel of length "A" and constant width "W" can be approximated as a sequence of "N" evenly spaced goals, each separated from its neighbours by a distance of "A/N". We can let "N" grow arbitrarily large, making the distance between successive goals become infinitesimal. The total time to navigative through all the goals, and thus through the tunnel, is

Next, consider a curved tunnel of total length "A", parameterized by "s" varying from 0 to "A". Let "W(s)" be the variable width of the tunnel. The tunnel can be approximated as a sequence of "N" straight tunnels, numbered 1 through "N", each located at "si" where "i" = 1 to "N", and each of length "s""i"+1 − "s""i" and of width "W"("s""i"). We can let "N" grow arbitrarily large, making the length of successive straight tunnels become infinitesimal. The total time to navigative through the curved tunnel is

yielding the general form of the steering law.

Modeling steering in layers

Steering law has been extended to predict movement time for steering in layers of thickness "t". The relation is given by

: T = a+bsqrt{(A/W)^2+(A/t)^2}.

References

* Drury, C. G. (1971). Movements with lateral constraint. Ergonomics, 14, 293–305.
* Johnny Accot and Shumin Zhai (1997). Beyond Fitts' law: models for trajectory-based HCI tasks. Proceedings of ACM CHI 1997 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, pp. 295–302. http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/258549.258760
* Johnny Accot and Shumin Zhai (1999). Performance evaluation of input devices in trajectory-based tasks: An application of the steering law. In Proceedings of ACM CHI 1999 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, pages 466–472. http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/302979.303133
* Johnny Accot and Shumin Zhai (2001). Scale effects in steering law tasks. In Proceedings of ACM CHI 2001 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, pages 1–8. http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/365024.365027
* Kattinakere, Raghavendra S., Grossman, Tovi and Subramanian, Sriram (2007): Modeling steering within above-the-surface interaction layers. In Proceedings of ACM CHI 2007 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2007. pp. 317–326. http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1240624.1240678
* Rashevsky, N. (1959). Mathematical biophysics of automobile driving. Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics, 21, 375–385.
* Shumin Zhai and Johnny Accot and Rogier Woltjer (2004). Human Action Laws in Electronic Virtual Worlds: An Empirical Study of Path Steering Performance in VR. Presence, Vol. 13, No. 2, April 2004, 113–127.
** Contains references to, and discusses differences with, earlier work on the "steering law" by Rashevsky and by Drury.

ee also

* Crossing-based interface — any graphical user interface that uses "goal crossing tasks" as the basic interaction paradigm

External links

* http://www.almaden.ibm.com/u/zhai/topics/LawsOfAction.htm


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • steering — index guidance, leading (guiding), management (supervision) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • steering committee — index management (directorate) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 steering committee …   Law dictionary

  • Steering — For other uses, see Steering (disambiguation). Part of car steering mechanism: tie rod, steering arm, king pin axis (using ball joints). Steering is the term applied to the collection of components, linkages, etc. which will allow a vessel (ship …   Wikipedia

  • Law of Hong Kong — The law of Hong Kong is based on the rule of law and the independence of the Judiciary. The constitutional framework for the legal system is provided by the Hong Kong Basic Law Under the principle of ‘one country, two systems’, the Hong Kong… …   Wikipedia

  • Joint Money Laundering Steering Group — (JMLSG) A multi disciplinary committee. Its members include representatives from the British Bankers Association, the Building Societies Commission and the Association of British Insurers together with representatives from other trade… …   Law dictionary

  • Fitts's law — In human computer interaction and ergonomics, Fitts s law (often cited as Fitts law) is a model of human movement which predicts the time required to rapidly move to a target area, as a function of the distance to the target and the size of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Racial steering — refers to the practice in which real estate brokers guide prospective home buyers towards or away from certain neighborhoods based on their race. Racial steering as defined by The Yale Law Journal is often divided into two broad classes of… …   Wikipedia

  • Automatism (law) — For a more detailed discussion of individual topics, see automatism (case law)In the Criminal Law, automatism is a defense to liability. Except in the case of strict liability offences, a crime must contain two elements: the actus reus or guilty… …   Wikipedia

  • Self-steering gear — is equipment used on ships and boats to maintain a chosen course without constant human action. It is also known by several other terms, such as autopilot (borrowed from aircraft and considered incorrect by some) and autohelm (technically a… …   Wikipedia

  • Appalachian School of Law — Infobox University name =Appalachian School of Law native name =ASL latin name = motto = established =1994 type =Private ABA Accredited School of Law endowment = staff = 50 faculty = 20 full time, 2 adjunct president = provost = principal =… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”