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ARound the Smartphone: Investigating the Effects of Virtually-Extended Display Size on Spatial Memory

Sebastian Hubenschmid, Johannes Zagermann, Daniel Leicht, Harald Reiterer, Tiare Feuchtner

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Abstract

Smartphones conveniently place large information spaces in the palms of our hands. While research has shown that larger screens positively affect spatial memory, workload, and user experience, smartphones remain fairly compact for the sake of device ergonomics and portability. Thus, we investigate the use of hybrid user interfaces to virtually increase the available display size by complementing the smartphone with an augmented reality head-worn display. We thereby combine the benefits of familiar touch interaction with the near-infinite visual display space afforded by augmented reality. To better understand the potential of virtually-extended displays and the possible issues of splitting the user’s visual attention between two screens (real and virtual), we conducted a within-subjects experiment with 24 participants completing navigation tasks using different virtually-augmented display sizes. Our findings reveal that a desktop monitor size represents a “sweet spot” for extending smartphones with augmented reality, informing the design of hybrid user interfaces.

Topics & Concepts

Augmented realityHuman–computer interactionComputer scienceSoftware portabilityDisplay sizeOptical head-mounted displayVirtual realityMobile deviceComputer-mediated realityUser experience designDisplay deviceAuditory displayMultimediaComputer graphics (images)Mixed realityComputer visionWorld Wide WebProgramming languageOperating systemAugmented Reality ApplicationsVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsInteractive and Immersive Displays
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