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Lei de Hick-Hyman×KLM-GOMS×
ÁreaInteração humano-computadorInteração humano-computador
FamíliaHypothesis testHypothesis test
Ano de origem19521983
Autor originalWilliam Edmund Hick and Ray HymanStuart Card, Thomas Moran, Allen Newell
TipoEmpirical model of choice reaction time as logarithmic function of number of choicesComputational cognitive model for task execution time prediction
Fonte seminalHick, W. E. (1952). On the rate of gain of information. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 4(1), 11–26. DOI ↗Card, S. K., Moran, T. P., & Newell, A. (1983). The Psychology of Human-Computer Interaction. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. ISBN: 0898592437
Outros nomesHick's Law, Law of Choice Reaction TimeGOMS Model, KLM
Relacionados44
ResumoThe Hick-Hyman Law predicts that human decision time increases logarithmically with the number of equally likely choices. Independently formulated by William Edmund Hick and Ray Hyman in the early 1950s, this law describes how long it takes a person to make a choice among alternatives. In human-computer interaction, the law is widely applied to menu design, navigation hierarchies, and command selection, showing that users take longer to select from larger sets of options, but the relationship is logarithmic, not linear.The Keystroke-Level Model (KLM), part of the Goals-Operators-Methods-Selection rules (GOMS) framework, is a computational method for predicting how long a user will take to accomplish a routine task using an interactive system. Developed by Card, Moran, and Newell in 1983, KLM decomposes user actions into primitive operators (keystrokes, mouse clicks, mental preparation, system response waits) with empirically derived execution times, enabling designers to estimate task performance without running user studies.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Hick-Hyman Law · KLM-GOMS. Recuperado em 2026-06-20 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare