Publication
User learning and performance with marking menus
AbstractA marking menu is designed to allow a user to perform a menu selection by either popping-up a radial (or pie) menu, or by making a straight mark in the direction of the desired menu item without popping-up the menu. Previous evaluations in laboratory settings have shown the potential of marking menus. This paper reports on a case study of user behavior with marking menus in a real work situation. The study demonstrates the following: First, marking menus are used as designed. When users become expert with the menus, marks are used extensively. However, the transition to using marks is not one way. Expert users still switch back to menus to refresh their memory of menu layout. Second, marking is an extremely efficient interaction technique. Using a mark on average was 3.5 times faster than selection using the menu. Finally, design principles can be followed that make menu item/mark associations easier to learn, and interaction efficient.
Download publicationRelated Resources
See what’s new.
2023
Flight of Innovation: How Drone Tech is Bridging Rural CommunitiesJoin this session at AU to learn about innovation in rural areas to…
2023
Connect with our Research Connections Speaker SeriesAutodesk Research Connections featuries industry leaders exploring the…
2014
Pteromys: Interactive Design and Optimization of Free-formed Free-flight Model AirplanesThis paper introduces novel interactive techniques for designing…
2013
A Multi-Site Field Study of Crowdsourced Contextual Help: Usage and Perspectives of End-Users and Software TeamsWe present a multi-site field study to evaluate LemonAid, a…
Get in touch
Something pique your interest? Get in touch if you’d like to learn more about Autodesk Research, our projects, people, and potential collaboration opportunities.
Contact us