The Impact of Coloured Hyperlinks when Reading Text, experimental data 2018
The Impact of Coloured Hyperlinks when Reading Text, experimental data 2018
There has been debate about whether blue hyperlinks on the Web cause disruption to reading. A series of eye tracking experiments were conducted to explore if coloured words in black text had any impact on reading behaviour outside and inside a Web environment. Experiment 1 and 2 explored the saliency of coloured words embedded in single sentences and the impact on reading behaviour. In Experiment 3, the effects of coloured words/hyperlinks in passages of text in a Web-like environment was explored. Experiment 1 and 2 showed that multiple coloured words in text had no negative impact on reading behaviour. However, if the sentence featured only a single coloured word, a reduction in skipping rates was observed. This suggests that the visual saliency associated with a single coloured word may signal to the reader that the word is important, whereas this signalling is reduced when multiple words are coloured. In Experiment 3, when reading passages of text containing hyperlinks in a Web environment, participants showed a tendency to re-read sentences that contained hyperlinked, uncommon words compared to hyperlinked, common words. Hyperlinks highlight important information and suggest additional content, which for more difficult concepts, invites rereading of the preceding text.
Fitzsimmons, Gemma
ac6b7c69-8992-44f1-92ca-05aa22e75129
Fitzsimmons, Gemma
ac6b7c69-8992-44f1-92ca-05aa22e75129
Fitzsimmons, Gemma
(2018)
The Impact of Coloured Hyperlinks when Reading Text, experimental data 2018.
UK Data Service
doi:10.5255/UKDA-SN-853342
[Dataset]
Abstract
There has been debate about whether blue hyperlinks on the Web cause disruption to reading. A series of eye tracking experiments were conducted to explore if coloured words in black text had any impact on reading behaviour outside and inside a Web environment. Experiment 1 and 2 explored the saliency of coloured words embedded in single sentences and the impact on reading behaviour. In Experiment 3, the effects of coloured words/hyperlinks in passages of text in a Web-like environment was explored. Experiment 1 and 2 showed that multiple coloured words in text had no negative impact on reading behaviour. However, if the sentence featured only a single coloured word, a reduction in skipping rates was observed. This suggests that the visual saliency associated with a single coloured word may signal to the reader that the word is important, whereas this signalling is reduced when multiple words are coloured. In Experiment 3, when reading passages of text containing hyperlinks in a Web environment, participants showed a tendency to re-read sentences that contained hyperlinked, uncommon words compared to hyperlinked, common words. Hyperlinks highlight important information and suggest additional content, which for more difficult concepts, invites rereading of the preceding text.
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Published date: 10 October 2018
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Research Performance
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Local EPrints ID: 426824
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/426824
PURE UUID: 61e7ab20-910f-4d52-948f-4996eae67f52
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Date deposited: 13 Dec 2018 10:33
Last modified: 06 May 2023 01:27
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Creator:
Gemma Fitzsimmons
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