Xref: utzoo sci.psychology:2051 comp.cog-eng:1170 Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!me!radio.astro!helios!utpsych!raymond From: raymond@utpsych.toronto.edu (Raymond Shaw) Newsgroups: sci.psychology,comp.cog-eng Subject: interfaces and memory (was Re: nav. thru menus in color) Summary: What you seem to remember may be an artifact of how you are tested Keywords: colour, menus, remembering, interfaces Message-ID: <1989Jun7.211741.22778@utpsych.toronto.edu> Date: 7 Jun 89 21:17:41 GMT References: <572@hfserver.hfnet.bt.co.uk> <3059@crete.cs.glasgow.ac.uk> Reply-To: raymond@psych.toronto.edu (Raymond Shaw) Organization: Psychology, U. of Toronto Lines: 13 In article <3059@crete.cs.glasgow.ac.uk> gilbert@cs.glasgow.ac.uk (Gilbert Cockton) writes: >Not having to remember is a feature of a good user interface. That depends on what you mean by "not having to remember." Not having to remember what? How to use the interface? Which menus to pull down? The more you can remember about it the faster you'll go. (IMH,but informed,O) The memory may not be explicit, it may be implicit or procedural. This is a currently important distinction in psychology, and it is vitally important to specify what you mean by remember, which is often, to a large extent, a function of how you test it. Ray Shaw raymond@psych.toronto.edu