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Investigating the Effects of Bimanual Multitouch Interaction on Creativity


Candidate: Allen Bevans
Type: Master of Science (MSc), School of Interactive Arts and Technology
Date: August 12, 2011
Senior Supervisor: Alissa Antle
Thesis: Download Thesis Document

Abstract

This thesis presents the results of an exploratory comparative study investigating the potential effects of bimanual interaction on creativity. Recent research from cognitive psychology and neuroscience suggests that body movement influences divergent thinking performance in previously unexpected ways. Divergent thinking is the process of generating multiple valid responses to a situation, and is an important part of creative behaviour. To examine the impact of the body movements afforded by multitouch displays on divergent thinking, study participants interacted with a computerized version of the Alternate Uses Task, a divergent thinking measurement test. Participants were assigned to one of three different interface styles: mouse, unimanual multitouch, and bimanual multitouch. In order to evaluate differences in creative performance between the interface styles, participant responses from the AUT were scored along several subscales, transforming qualitative AUT response data into quantitative data suitable for statistical analysis. While no strong interface style effects on divergent thinking were found, important findings about language ability and representational modality were identified. The summary of this analysis and implications for the design of creativity-support systems are discussed herein.
The main contribution of this study is that it is the first empirical comparison of multitouch interaction and traditional mouse-based interaction focusing on creative performance. A second contribution is a unique combination of current research and methodological approaches from psychology, neuroscience and HCI. A third contribution is the development of a computerized version of the Alternate Uses Task, capable of being run on diverse interaction platforms.
Keywords: Interface style, input methods, multitouch, bimanual, direct, indirect, comparative studies, divergent thinking, creativity.

Graduate  //  Theses

Complete thesis documents are available through the SFU Library External Site


Haizley Trevor-Smith, November 28, 2011

Victor (Yingjie) Chen, November 23, 2011

Billy Chi-kai Cheung, November 22, 2011

Andrew Hawryshkewich, September 23, 2011

Lorne McIntosh, September 12, 2011

Andre Gagne, August 23, 2011

Andrew Wade, August 22, 2011

Lynda Nakashima, August 19, 2011

Katie Seaborn, August 16, 2011

Allen Bevans, August 12, 2011

Kristin Carlson, August 11, 2011

Jinsil Seo, July 28, 2011

Erin Ashenhurst, July 14, 2011

Veronika Tzankova, June 10, 2011

Hector Larios, May 27, 2011

Majid Bagheri, April 26, 2011

Alireza Davoodi, April 12, 2011

Pooya Amini Behbahani, March 29, 2011

Robin Oppenheimer, March 18, 2011

Dustin Dunsmuir, March 11, 2011

Nazanin Kadivar, February 28, 2011

Johnny Rodgers, February 22, 2011

Bardia Aghabeigi, February 21, 2011

Huaxin Wei, February 16, 2011