The art of navigating through hypertext
Communications of the ACM
The structure of hypertext activity
Proceedings of the the seventh ACM conference on Hypertext
User performance with command, menu, and iconic interfaces
CHI '85 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Genres and the Web: is the personal home page the first uniquely digital genre?
Journal of the American Society for Information Science
Learning where to look: location learning in graphical user interfaces
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Evolution of the Web News Genre ¾ The Slow Move Beyond the Print Metaphor
HICSS '00 Proceedings of the 33rd Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences-Volume 3 - Volume 3
Genre based Navigation on the Web
HICSS '01 Proceedings of the 34th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences ( HICSS-34)-Volume 4 - Volume 4
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Implicit measures of lostness and success in web navigation
Interacting with Computers
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
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This experiment investigates what happens to user performance and disorientation when visual conventions of a genre are violated. It also looks at what happens to the user performance and disorientation over time. Twenty-eight participants were randomly allocated to two independent groups: one was tested with a conventional website and the other with a convention-violating website. The study comprised of two parts and on each part participants were tested on a different website. Results showed that in the first part participants who used the violating site performed worse and were more disoriented than participants who used the conventional version. But the performance of the participants of the convention-violating group improved over time so that by the end of the first part performance on both groups were equivalent. In the second part performance and disorientation on both groups were equivalent suggesting that users might rapidly adapt to visual convention violations.