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INTERACT
2003

Candidate Display Styles in Japanese Input

13 years 5 months ago
Candidate Display Styles in Japanese Input
: Typing Japanese into computers consists of typing Roman alphabet, displaying the kana character, converting kana to kanji, and selecting the intended kanji character from a list of homophonic candidates. This paper presents a study of four candidate display styles, three commonly used in commercial products (“vertical,” “horizontal,” and “compact-horizontal”) and one novel (“matrix”), together with various manual selection methods (mouse, numeric key, spacebar, cursor key, numeric keypad and unrestricted input method). The results show that (1) when typing a single kanji character, about 70% of total operation time is spent on choice selection; and (2) the “compact-horizontal” and “matrix” display styles are superior to the other display styles.
Xiangshi Ren, Kinya Tamura, Jing Kong, Shumin Zhai
Added 31 Oct 2010
Updated 31 Oct 2010
Type Conference
Year 2003
Where INTERACT
Authors Xiangshi Ren, Kinya Tamura, Jing Kong, Shumin Zhai
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