Creative Synthesis Blog

Talking about Creativity as Combination, The thoughts and works of the Creative Synthesis Collaborative.

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This thing was constructed on April 17, 2007, and it was categorized as Commentary, Data, General, graphs, infovis, mousetrack, recycledresearch, research, theme, usability.
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As we wind down our beta period for Recycled Canvas we’re in the process of preparing an internal report of some of the results. We’re planning on getting the Recycled Canvas 1.0 release out later this week. Until then, here are some highlights from the experiment that we’re putting in our report.

There is no denying we got a lot of data.
Lots of Data

With some pretty decent download stats.
Graph of Downloads

Highlight: A Single User Path

In this example we can observe a single use page. The user comes in from the upper left of the archive page. They pause on the second article, and proceed to the third. They then quickly return to the second article, which they scan for some time (without conversion) as they exit the page to the top.

Single User

Highlight: Reading Patterns

Reading patterns are difficult, but not impossible, to interpret. With careful filtering certain patterns and key sections of an article can be identified. It is also easy to identify basic user behavior. In this case the article demonstrates large degrees of ‘drop-off’ - the rate at which a user abandons an article. Very few users continued reading this article below the fold.

Reading Patterns

Highlight: Interpreting Results

From left to right, these results suggest things like:

  • Sidebar Placement
    Sidebar placement on the left, although non traditional in blog design encourages short distance travels between headlines and sidebar navigation.
  • Resting
    Whitespace near the edge of the page often serves as a resting spot for the mouse for some percentage of readers who like to get the mouse ‘out of the way’ to help concentration on a page.
  • Action Identification
    Here we can identify a specific action, in this case feed subscription, along a use path. High percentages of such users (possibly indicating detailed interest in the page) produce this path.

Three results

Highlight: Image Scanning

There is little doubt that adding images to the beginning of posts serves as a strong attractor. Here we see a number of users move back and forth between the article text above and below and the image. Hover times for the image are remarkably large, even with the relative simplicity of it.

Image Scanning

That’s all for now. More to follow in the next two weeks.

This thing was constructed by .
Matthew is the Director of the Collaborative. He writes rarely, and that makes him sad.

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