Title :
An Empirical Study of the Effects of Gestalt Principles on Diagram Understandability
Author :
Lemon, Krystle ; Allen, Edward B. ; Carver, Jeffrey C. ; Bradshaw, Gary L.
Author_Institution :
Mississippi State Univ., Starkville
Abstract :
Comprehension errors in software design must be detected at their origin to avoid propagation into later portions of the software lifecycle and also the final system. This research synthesizes software engineering and Gestalt principles of similarity, proximity, continuity for the purpose of discovering whether certain visual attributes of diagrams can affect the accuracy and efficiency of understanding the diagram. The experiment tested whether two dependent variables, accuracy and response time, were significantly affected by independent variables, diagram type (simple 1, simple2, complex), Gestalt principles (good vs. bad), and question order (forward/backward). The results of this study indicated that the Gestalt principles did affect the comprehension in the complex diagrams. Post-hoc analysis results indicated that number of bends per line, length of line in inches, number of lines crossing, boxes per diagram, and number of lines per diagram contributed to the ability of the subjects to comprehend the diagrams.
Keywords :
design; program testing; reverse engineering; software architecture; Gestalt principles; comprehension errors detection; diagram understandability; post-hoc analysis; software architecture; software design; software engineering; software lifecycle; Cognitive science; Computer errors; Computer science; Design engineering; Humans; Psychology; Software architecture; Software design; Software engineering; Software measurement; Gestalt principles; cognitive science; diagram comprehension; empirical; software architecture; software engineering;
Conference_Titel :
Empirical Software Engineering and Measurement, 2007. ESEM 2007. First International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Madrid
Print_ISBN :
978-0-7695-2886-1
DOI :
10.1109/ESEM.2007.37