The role of colour preattentive processing in human-computer interaction task efficiency: a preliminary study
Rafal Michalski, Jerzy Grobelny

TL;DR
This study investigates how colour preattentive processing influences task efficiency in human-computer interaction, showing that colour features can improve interface usability but are affected by layout orientation and pattern regularity.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence on the impact of colour preattentive processing in HCI and highlights how layout and pattern influence its effectiveness.
Findings
Colour preattentive processing enhances interface efficiency.
Vertical arrangements reduce the preattentive effect.
Random colour patterns yield stronger preattentive responses.
Abstract
In this paper, results of experimental research on the preattentive mechanism in the human-computer interaction (HCI) were presented. Fifty four subjects were asked to find interface elements from various panel structures. The arrangements were differentiated by their orientation (vertical, horizontal), colour pattern (ordered, unordered) and object background colours (green-blue, green-red, blue-red). The main finding of the study generally confirms the profits provided by the visual preattentive processing of the colour feature in graphical panel operation efficiency. However, the vertical way of arranging the items in search layouts resulted in decreasing the preattentive effect related to the item background colour. In regular, chessboard-like patterns of different coloured items, the effect of the early vision was less salient than in the case of structures with randomly dispersed…
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