| F-Shaped Pattern For Reading Web Content |
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F-Shaped Pattern For Reading Web ContentJakob Nielsen's Alertbox, April 17, 2006:Summary: F for fast. That's how users read your precious content. In a few seconds, their eyes move at amazing speeds across your website's words in a pattern that's very different from what you learned in school. In our new eyetracking study, we recorded how 232 users looked at thousands of Web pages. We found that users' main reading behavior was fairly consistent across many different sites and tasks. This dominant reading pattern looks somewhat like an F and has the following three components:
The above heatmaps show how users read three different types of Web pages:
On the e-commerce page (middle example), the second crossbar of the F is lower than usual because of the intervening product image. Users also allocated significant fixation time to a box in the upper right part of the page where the price and "add to cart" button are found. On the SERP (right example), the second crossbar of the F is longer than the top crossbar, mainly because the second headline is longer than the first. In this case, both headlines proved equally interesting to users, though users typically read less of the second area they view on a page. Implications of the F PatternThe F pattern's implications for Web design are clear and show the importance of following the guidelines for writing for the Web instead of repurposing print content:
Detailed Scanning BehaviorsIt's fascinating to watch the slow-motion replay of users' eye movements as they read and scan across a page. Every page has reading issues beyond the dominant F pattern I'm discussing here. For example, users scan in a different, more directed way when they're looking for prices or other numbers, and an interesting hot-potato behavior determines how users look at a list of search engine ads. We also have many findings on how people look at website images.We'll present the detailed findings in our seminar on Eyetracking Web Usability at the Usability Week 2006 conference in San Francisco, London, and Sydney. Advanced two-day course on writing for the Web in San Francisco and Sydney. |
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