Effects of Keyboard Design and Typing Skill on User Keyboard Preferences and Throughput Performance

Rose Mae Richardson / Hans Brunner

Abstract: A study was conducted to compare user preferences and throughput performance on 3 prominent keyboards with 3 different kinds of key action mechanisms. Preference and throughput data were obtained from both skilled (>65 WPM) and occasional (30-50 WPM) typists. Both groups of typists indicated about equal preference for keyboards with snap-spring and elastomer key actions and much lower preference ratings for the keyboard with a low-resistance, linear spring key action mechanism. Fewer errors and faster typing throughput were obtained on keyboards with the elastomer key action than on the other two keyboards, equipped with snap- and linear-spring key action mechanisms. This facilitation was greater for the occasional typists than for the experts. The reverse interaction was obtained for electronic key click, which produced much larger increases in real throughput for experts than the occasional typists.

Keywords: Keyboard input, Hardware development, Design, Typing, Empirical studies

Note: Originally published in Proceedings of the Human Factors Society 28th Annual Meeting, 1984, pp. 267-271, (online access).

Republished: G. Perlman, G. K. Green & M. S. Wogalter (Eds) Human Factors Perspectives on Human-Computer Interaction: Selections from Proceedings of Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meetings, 1983-1994, Santa Monica, California: HFES, 1995, pp. 14-18.