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Eyetracking Web Usability
 
 

Eyetracking Web Usability [Kindle Edition]

Jakob Nielsen , Kara Pernice
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product Description

Product Description

This is the eBook version of the printed book.

Eyetracking Web Usability is based on one of the largest studies of eyetracking usability in existence. Best-selling author Jakob Nielsen and coauthor Kara Pernice used rigorous usability methodology and eyetracking technology to analyze 1.5 million instances where users look at Web sites to understand how the human eyes interact with design. Their findings will help designers, software developers, writers, editors, product managers, and advertisers understand what people see or don’t see, when they look, and why.

With their comprehensive three-year study, the authors confirmed many known Web design conventions and the book provides additional insights on those standards. They also discovered important new user behaviors that are revealed here for the first time. Using compelling eye gaze plots and heat maps, Nielsen and Pernice guide the reader through hundreds of examples of eye movements, demonstrating why some designs work and others don’t. They also provide valuable advice for page layout, navigation menus, site elements, image selection, and advertising. This book is essential reading for anyone who is serious about doing business on the Web.

From the Back Cover

Eyetracking Web Usability is based on one of the largest studies of eyetracking usability in existence. Best-selling author Jakob Nielsen and coauthor Kara Pernice used rigorous usability methodology and eyetracking technology to analyze 1.5 million instances where users look at Web sites to understand how the human eyes interact with design. Their findings will help designers, software developers, writers, editors, product managers, and advertisers understand what people see or don’t see, when they look, and why.

With their comprehensive three-year study, the authors confirmed many known Web design conventions and the book provides additional insights on those standards. They also discovered important new user behaviors that are revealed here for the first time. Using compelling eye gaze plots and heat maps, Nielsen and Pernice guide the reader through hundreds of examples of eye movements, demonstrating why some designs work and others don’t. They also provide valuable advice for page layout, navigation menus, site elements, image selection, and advertising. This book is essential reading for anyone who is serious about doing business on the Web.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 16606 KB
  • Print Length: 456 pages
  • Publisher: New Riders Press; 1 edition (26 April 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B000UZNQZG
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #157,393 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Jakob Nielsen
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I have read the usability books of Steve Krug and Prioritizing Web Usability of Jakob Nielsen, and this book is a great addition to them. It is easy to digest, offers many visual examples and in offers valuable new insights based on what Eyetracking can do but normal usability testing can't. They broke down their conclusions in general guidelines which can be used for practically all sites.

Like the other usability books, this book is a must ready for anyone (designer, developer or manager) involved in website creation.
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Amazon.com:  16 reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
A Very Academic Book - Not for Beginners 4 Sep 2010
By Sheldon Chang - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
As one of the other reviewers said, there's not a lot here that will break new ground and most of the points made are things that experienced UI designers already understand. Two exceptions for me were the findings about the attractiveness of text as a design feature and the exact degree that banner blindness can affect a user's experience.

Although a lot of the findings in this book will be more profound for those with less experience, it doesn't mean that this book is ideal for beginners. Quite the contrary, I think the people who can make the most use of this book are people who already understand just about every UI guideline in this book. I say this because this is a book that's all about data and evidence of things a lot of us already know, but can't convince others of. It's a book that might help you persuade someone who's insistent that things need to be done a certain way that perhaps a different approach would be better.

This book really covers a niche topic and will probably bore anyone who doesn't have a high level of academic curiosity to tears. For rookies looking for design tips, there are far more concise and easier to understand volumes of work. In many ways this is a very long research journal article produced in the form of a book. The tomes of data and explanations overwhelm the scattered number of important design points in the book. If you just want to skim the big take away lessons from this book, you can do it in one sitting. Just look at the pictures and read the captions. If you need more background info, then read a few pages around the illustrations for more info.

My one critique of the book and one that might knock half a star off my rating if Amazon did half stars was that the book was difficult to follow in some stretches. The way they wrote the narratives about their subjects' behaviors and motiviations were often hard to understand and in many cases, it may have been better to simply use more bullet points and illustrations instead of full text narratives of how the subjects were navigating. They often mention their subjects by first name and it gets hard to keep them apart in your memory.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Overly Verbose, Under-Delivers, Too Much Space on Irrelevant Topics 21 Feb 2012
By Michael Brenner - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Although many of the web usability observations presented in the book will be helpful to web and ecommerce designers, the authors really could have said much, much more using far less space. Follow Steve Krug's style: be concise! The book under delivers in the sense that much has been left out which was researched but was not adequately covered in the book, such as usability issues as they pertain to ecommerce sites. Many, many pages were spent going into minute detail on how a particular user utilized a given web site rather than summarizing and following with concise conclusions, making the book onerous to get through. Irrelevant topics were also covered, such as web users' attention paid to dog's crotches (I kid you not, this is an actual topic, covered in depth), making it difficult to take the book seriously and compromising the authors' credibility.

In addition, the writing style was a bit immature. The impression I received from their writing was that of a group of undergrads who were given money and let loose in Manhattan and required to produce a paper to account for their efforts.

I had really looked forward to this book, and unfortunately it fell far short of my expectations. Although, there is a lot of good usability information in the book, I would not recommend the book on that basis, because the information must be ferreted out from all the excess prose.
Not a lot of actionable conclusions for web designer/developers 21 May 2012
By Nora Brown - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
I agree with another reviewer who mentioned that the in-depth, step-by-step descriptions of specific users' fixations on a web page are tedious to read, and do little to support any actual design guidelines. At times the conclusions the authors draw seem contradictory, or so general as to be obvious. ("In sum, a combination of layout and content almost always dictates what draws or repels users eyes. (p. 58). I did not need a $40 book to tell me that.)

The examples in this book demonstrate that eyetracking data is too specific to each context (user, task, website, environment) to be able to draw many widely applicable conclusions from it. Though a few interesting phenomena that have design implications are revealed through eyetracking (banner blindness and gaze following, for example), the tool seems better suited to diagnosing specific website problems.

I was definitely disappointed by the scarcity of practical design recommendations in this book.
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Popular Highlights

 (What's this?)
&quote;
When the eye is resting on something, its called a fixation. The eyes rapid movements from one fixation to the next are called saccades. &quote;
Highlighted by 8 Kindle users
&quote;
what people are looking at and what they are thinking about tends to be the same. &quote;
Highlighted by 7 Kindle users
&quote;
According to the mindeye hypothesis, people are usually thinking about what they are looking at. They do not always totally understand or engage with it, but if they are looking, they are usually paying attention, especially when concentrating on a particular task. &quote;
Highlighted by 7 Kindle users

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