Publicação

Consistency one-to-many: an analysis of crossplatform visual consistency in the most accessed global sites

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:Users are accessing the same content on multiple platforms. From a user-centric perspective, these different platforms impose different constraints to web designers, namely visually, since the graphic elements of the interfaces need to be adapted and reconfigured to multiple contexts and screen sizes. In this context, visual consistency emerges as a relevant issue because of its impact on user experience across desktop and mobile screens. This study examines visual consistency on the world's most accessed 15 websites, in their smartphone and desktop versions. Our findings suggest that users perceive different levels of cross-platform visual consistency. There are visual elements, like image texture in logos, icons and photographs, where standards and conventions clearly emerge. But when we examined elements like image size, results indicate less perceived visual consistency.
Autores principais:Antunes, Ana Cristina
Outros Autores:Souto, Jorge; Saboia, Inga
Assunto:Web design Interface design Responsive sites Multi-platform transition Cross-platform consistency Web graphic elements Consistency Perception of consistency Visual consistency User-centric
Ano:2021
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:artigo
Tipo de acesso:acesso restrito
Instituição associada:Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa
Descrição
Resumo:Users are accessing the same content on multiple platforms. From a user-centric perspective, these different platforms impose different constraints to web designers, namely visually, since the graphic elements of the interfaces need to be adapted and reconfigured to multiple contexts and screen sizes. In this context, visual consistency emerges as a relevant issue because of its impact on user experience across desktop and mobile screens. This study examines visual consistency on the world's most accessed 15 websites, in their smartphone and desktop versions. Our findings suggest that users perceive different levels of cross-platform visual consistency. There are visual elements, like image texture in logos, icons and photographs, where standards and conventions clearly emerge. But when we examined elements like image size, results indicate less perceived visual consistency.