Abstract
Webpages vary drastically in their look and feel: The presence of images is a major discriminating factor. Some webpages contain mainly text; others exploit flashy ads and a variety of eye-catching pictures. In this paper, we investigate the impact of graphics on webpage aesthetics perception and computation. We split webpages in three categories - small, moderate and high amount of graphics - and analyzed how different visual features predicted aesthetics for the different categories. Significant between-category differences were found, e.g., the amount of white space decreased aesthetics for the high-graphic webpages, but not for other webpages; more on-page main colors increased aesthetics for the low-graphic webpages, but decreased for the high-graphic webpages. We suggest future research investigates separately webpages with low and high graphic amount. No single improvement recipe may exist for all webpages; a more fruitful strategy would be suggesting different improvements for different types of webpages.
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CITATION STYLE
Miniukovich, A., & De Angeli, A. (2016). Webpage aesthetics: One size doesn’t fit all. In ACM International Conference Proceeding Series (Vol. 23-27-October-2016). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/2971485.2971544
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