Publication
Mimic: Visual Analysis of Online Micro-interactions
Abstract
We present Mimic, an input capture and visual analytics system that records online user behavior to facilitate the discovery of micro-interactions that may affect problem understanding and decision making. As aggregate statistics and visualizations can mask important behaviors, Mimic can help interaction designers to improve the usability of their designs by going beyond aggregates to examine many individual user sessions in detail. To test Mimic, we replicate a recent crowd-sourcing experiment to better understand why participants consistently perform poorly in answering a canonical conditional probability question called the Mammography Problem. To analyze the micro-interactions, the Mimic web application is used to play back user sessions collected through remote logging of client-side events. We use Mimic to demonstrate the value of using advanced visual interfaces to interactively study interaction data. In the Mammography Problem, issues like user confusion, low confidence, and divided-attention were found based on participants changing their answers, doing repeated scrolling, and overestimating a base rate. Mimic shows how helpful detailed observational data can be and how important the careful design of micro-interactions is in helping users to successfully understand a problem, find a solution, and achieve their goals.OPEN SOURCE
Download publicationRelated Resources
See what’s new.
2023
Recently Published by Autodesk ResearchersA selection of recently published papers by Autodesk Researchers…
2020
Highly accessible platform technologies for vision‑guided, closed‑loop robotic assembly of unitized enclosure systemsEquipping robotics with the capacity to make decisions based on…
2001
Interaction Techniques for 3D Modeling on Large DisplaysWe present an alternate interface for 3D modeling for use on large…
2004
MOOD: From Bucket Based Learning to Socially Mediated, Highly Contextual Learning ExperiencesA flurry of online universities has emerged in the last decade…
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