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Effects of mobile map orientation and tactile feedback on navigation speed and situation awareness
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Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Human computer interaction with mobile devices and services table of contents
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
SESSION: Full papers table of contents
Pages 73-80  
Year of Publication: 2008
ISBN:978-1-59593-952-4
Authors
Nanja J. J. M. Smets  University of Technology, kampweg, Soesterberg
Guido M. te Brake  TNO Human Factors, kampweg, Soesterberg
Mark A. Neerincx  University of Technology, kampweg, Soesterberg
Jasper Lindenberg  TNO Human Factors, kampweg, Soesterberg
Sponsors
SIGMOBILE: ACM Special Interest Group on Mobility of Systems, Users, Data and Computing
SIGCHI: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

Mobile information systems aid first responders in their tasks. Support is often based on mobile maps. People have different preferences for map orientations (heading-up or north-up), but map orientations also have different advantages and disadvantages. In general north-up maps are good for building up situation awareness and heading-up maps are better for navigational tasks. Because of heavily loaded visual modalities, we expect that tactile waypoint information can enhance navigation speed and situation awareness. In this paper we describe an experiment conducted in a synthetic task environment, in which we examined the effect of heading-up and north-up displays on search and rescue performance of first responders, and if adding the tactile display improves performance.


REFERENCES

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Collaborative Colleagues:
Nanja J. J. M. Smets: colleagues
Guido M. te Brake: colleagues
Mark A. Neerincx: colleagues
Jasper Lindenberg: colleagues