Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Google eye tracking study
At Google everything relies on data... so what better way to understand how users scan a page than to analyze it...
Pretty cool insight into how your eyes will track across a page. Most interesting parragraph:
"Based on eye-tracking studies, we know that people tend to scan the search results in order. They start from the first result and continue down the list until they find a result they consider helpful and click it — or until they decide to refine their query. The heatmap below shows the activity of 34 usability study participants scanning a typical Google results page. The darker the pattern, the more time they spent looking at that part of the page. This pattern suggests that the order in which Google returned the results was successful; most users found what they were looking for among the first two results and they never needed to go further down the page."
Labels:
eye tracking,
Google,
Universal search
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