Eye-tracking Study Shows How Users Scan Web Pages 62
apatrick writes "An article in UsabilityNews.com
describes an experiment where Internet users' eyes were tracked while they searched for information on WWW pages from three well-known newspapers. The findings indicated that people learn very quickly where ads are usually placed on web pages, and then they no longer look there. The results also show that users look to the left hand side for navigation menus, and they scan from the middle of the page outward. Such results may be useful for developers wanting to make their pages more usable, or to attract the users' attention."
Applied Research (Score:5, Insightful)
So that's why the big box is placed annoyingly and unavoidably right under the story post here at Slashdot.
BTW, I predict that widespread uptake of DVRs and the ability to fast forward through commercials will cause similar Innovations to occur.
Newscrawl style advertisements are coming.
Re:Applied Research (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Applied Research (Score:2)
Applied -- but not to usability (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, like the
Usability is about helping the user make USE of the website, isn't it? Well, it seems those pesky users are getting too smart for their own good (somehow they're jumping directly to the useful parts!) -- quick, let's figure out how to stop this nonsense!
Seriously, I know that online advertising plays an important role in funding freely available sites. But on a website that's purportedly all about usability, it blows my mind that they don't even mention the negative impact that an advertising method that *really* catches the users' eyes will have. Those ads are *detracting* from the usefulness of the site; the slashdot ad box right under the story is a little annoying, because you have to scroll past it to get to what you want (the fr0st p1st, of course). Designers need to keep the balance in mind (and it shouldn't be left out of the discussion).
Personally, when I have to use IE for some reason, I suddenly remember what it's like using the an internet saturated in popup windows and manically-flashing ads... and I can't get through it. I can't concentrate enough to read an article when there's something that simply won't stop flashing right in the middle of the text.
Sure it gets my attention. My eyes can't stop jumping back to that flashing thing. Sometimes I even go to the advertised website, and submit their domain registrant's info into all available forms. Funny, that probably shows up on their statistics as another big win.
Google's text links are okay (which is a good thing, since Mozilla won't block those for me!) -- I'll even click one if it looks relevant. That's the future of web advertising, I think.
Re:Applied -- but not to usability (Score:1)
Re:Applied Research (Score:1)
--
Proud User OF Mozilla Fierbird
Re:Applied Research (Score:2)
Re:Applied Research (Score:2)
Re:Applied Research (Score:2)
And this one:
is simply hillarious: of course they did! That stupid jumping-singing red and yellow thing that has been distracting them at the corner of an eye!Re:Applied Research (Score:2)
UN UsabilityNews.Com
reads "unusability news"
And this surprises you how?? (Score:4, Insightful)
Most webpages all have a very similar layout so it just makes sense to begin looking for navigation bars on the left hand side. Why would you start elsewhere? Also most of the 'meat' of a page is in the middle, ie. ads are usually pushed off to the sides, so as far as starting from the middle goes, it just makes sense. People didn't come to see ads, they came to see content.
Re:And this surprises you how?? (Score:1, Interesting)
Research isn't for finding out only the surprising (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:And this surprises you how?? (Score:1)
Redo (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm also worried that studies like this may be used to put advertising in different more annoying places in more annoying ways making it harder to block and ignore.
And if you are wondering how to remove all ads in firebird check this out
http://www.texturizer.net/firebird/adblock.html
Re:Redo (Score:4, Insightful)
They've already got that. The main reason I block javascript-based ads was experience with an ad that placed itself squarely under the mouse pointer.
Re:Redo (Score:1)
Re: SIG (Score:2)
My spoon is too big.
Re:Redo (Score:2)
There is in IE, and has always been as far as I know.
Also consider a filtering proxy (Score:1)
Hmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Seriously though, I was a bit nonplussed to be spoken to by Michael Jordan the other day whilst browsing the Yahoo site. Turns out it was a Flash banner ad for an underwear company, for which the purported greatest basketball player of all time was hawking. Yes, it caused me to glance up, but then it also caused the following sequence: a scowl, an epithet, an immediate drop in my opinion of MJ and the product, and a drop in the likelihood I will either buy the product or use Yahoo as a resource.
My fear is that as broadband becomes more commonplace, it's not going to mean faster browsing for everybody, it's going to be mean actual commercials on the web. To quote Snoopy: "Blech!"
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
I think it's because of the medium... television puts us into a much more passive state. We accept what is streamed to us, and this extends to advertisements too. The web, on the other hand, is much more like print. Our minds are more active when surfi
Re:Hmm (Score:2, Insightful)
There ought to be a convenient way to turn plugins like flash on and off in the browser. Right now I've made a pair of one-line shell scripts to do it:
flashon: mv /usr/lib/flash-plugin/libflashplayer.so.xxx /usr/lib/flash-plugin/libflashplayer.so
flashoff: mv /usr/lib/flash-plugin/libflashplayer.so /usr/lib/flash-plugin/libflashplayer.so.xxx
I usually have it off.
I simply can't read a website with dancing animations. I don't mean "I don't
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Well what was the product?!? I'm dying to know!!
Menu Placement (Score:4, Interesting)
Now that a proper study has been done on the topic, I imagine that I should start moving menus over to the left-hand side of the page. It might be less efficient, but even crappy standards are still standards.
-Waldo Jaquith
Re:Menu Placement (Score:2)
Re:Menu Placement (Score:3, Insightful)
A quick, non-scientific time-and-motion study shows that it requires about 1/3 of a second and a hand motion of less than an inch to move the mouse pointer from the right-hand scroll bar to the left-hand menu at Slashdot. It takes several seconds (but less hand motion) to locate a menu in a non-sta
Scroll bar?!? (Score:3, Informative)
Only time I ever use the scroll bar is if I know the approximate location of what I'm lookin for on the page, and even then it's easier (in firebird) to just start typing and find-as-you-type picks up on it. (Note that it's better if you disable the option that only does find-as-you-ty
Re:Scroll bar?!? (Score:2)
Speaking of the scroll bar (Score:3, Interesting)
Think about it -- most text is left justified; titles and headings start at the left (we read left-to-right, after all)... there's just more data over there if you're skimming. Technically, it would make more sense to have the navigation over there too... but again we're stuck with a standard that can't be change
Re:Menu Placement (Score:3, Interesting)
=Brian
How to disable flash in IE (Score:4, Informative)
HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\ActiveX Compatibility\{D27CDB6E-AE6D-11CF-96B8-4445535400
Disable Flash:
"Compatibility Flags" = 0x400
Enable:
"Compatibility Flags" = 0x0
Enjoy your somewhat more advertising free world.
Re:How to disable flash in IE (Score:5, Funny)
HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\ActiveX Compatibility\{D27CDB6E-AE6D-11CF-96B8-44455354000 0}
Disable Flash:
"Compatibility Flags" = 0x400
Enable:
"Compatibility Flags" = 0x0
Mark my words you weenies: Linux will never be ready for the desktop until it's as intuitive as Windows.
Re:How to disable flash in IE (Score:2)
The Linux-using contingent traditionally *has* liked to second-guess people and get whatever information they want, so they don't run into this.
New, from EyeTracker Technologies! (Score:4, Funny)
Just demand that users, before they are allowed access to your precious content, install an AdEye USB camera ($199 retail - Windows XP IE 6.0+WMAw/DRM only) and point it at themselves! Our patented NoFoolinMe technology will validate that it is not just a Dilbert doll made to look like a web 'surfer', and then proceed to put up your choice of ads right in their line of site!
If a so-called 'user' tries to look elsewhere to 'steal' useful information, the ad follows their gaze in Real Time, using our Patented Real Time Ad Aware Eye Tracking IE Plugin Technology (#11233451). If their eyes do spot any potentially useful information, you can rest assured that it wasn't because you didn't try!
Act now, and receive free the Force-Ad server-side enhancement (patent pending). With Force-Ad, you can replace the entirety of your content with Ads, thus further ensuring that noone who looks at your website will receive any useful information in a timely manner or easy-to-use way, all from the server side that is under _your_ control!
Can you afford to wait? Call us today!
Good link for industry aggregates (Score:3, Informative)
Here's the surviving mirror in Russian [webmascon.com] with links to the resources in English if you scroll down.
Usable? (Score:2)
I would imagine this story will have little interest or impact here. I mean, next thing you know we'll start having stories on how to make your pages standards compliant!
Re:Usable? (Score:2)
Re:Usable? (Score:2)
They're smart alright (Score:3, Funny)
what about right-left language readers? (Score:1)
Print Version (Score:5, Insightful)
Although, banner ads appear on the top and bottom of print versions as well, at least they aren't in the middle.
Re:Print Version (Score:2)
That's not the only reason. They also do it to get feedback on which stories people actually finish reading.
(It's a small step towards making a web page behave as a connectionful protocol)
Ads: a symptom of inefficient economic machinery (Score:1, Insightful)
Buy a pill. Pay more for ads and promotion than for the research and production. Can't you imagine a better way to know about a pill when you need one than being hammered with ads everywhere you look?
What about Googling for what you need? Is the era of pull-marketing going to replace pushers?
Why should I pay for all the BS and TV shows that have nothing to do with ea
Re:Ads: a symptom of inefficient economic machiner (Score:1)
in a word, no
pull-marketing is more efficient, and user-centric, so the push-marketers will be more and more aggressive, so they don't lose their business model, in five years, they'll be the next RIAA.
--
In North America, your Business Model chooses you, and won't ever let go.
a world without ads. Really? (Score:1)
But don't forget most of the sites we visit everyday have business models more or less dependent on the income made from those ads...
So if we all manage to block ads, the interesting sites we access everyday may soon be gone...
C'est a dire, let's make the technology available but difficult enough to install so that only us geeks can surf add-free... hehe...
Re:a world without ads. Really? (Score:2)
I understand your thinking, but let me disagree with you. Most of the sites which provide "good" content(ofcourse what is "good" is very very objective) are not dependent on ads much. This is especially true in the case of news sites. Most of the good news site( I dont mean the highly biased and propogandistic mainstream ones) are not ad based. Also, I am sure even if this ads become irrelevent, some other model with mor
So where's the news? (Score:1)
this would seem fairly useless (Score:1)
It is very likely that I don't scan the slashdot logo anymore or the icons at the top either.
The left to right scanning is
question (Score:2)
A company I worked for did this research. (Score:2, Interesting)
We used this data to write a program that w