Wigglite: Low-cost Information Collection and Triage
Michael Xieyang Liu, Andrew Kuznetsov, Yongsung Kim, Joseph Chee, Chang, Aniket Kittur, Brad A. Myers

TL;DR
Wigglite introduces a novel 'wiggling' gesture for low-cost, efficient information collection and mental context externalization during online exploration, reducing operational effort and increasing speed.
Contribution
This work presents a new interaction technique called 'wiggling' that simplifies and accelerates information capture and mental context encoding during sensemaking tasks.
Findings
58% reduction in operational cost
24% faster information collection
Effective in accurately capturing information and mental context
Abstract
Consumers conducting comparison shopping, researchers making sense of competitive space, and developers looking for code snippets online all face the challenge of capturing the information they find for later use without interrupting their current flow. In addition, during many learning and exploration tasks, people need to externalize their mental context, such as estimating how urgent a topic is to follow up on, or rating a piece of evidence as a "pro" or "con," which helps scaffold subsequent deeper exploration. However, current approaches incur a high cost, often requiring users to select, copy, context switch, paste, and annotate information in a separate document without offering specific affordances that capture their mental context. In this work, we explore a new interaction technique called "wiggling," which can be used to fluidly collect, organize, and rate information during…
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