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Banner Ads Hinder Visual Search and Are Forgotten. Moira Burke 1 , Nicholas Gorman 2 , Erik Nilsen 2 , and Anthony Hornof 1. 1 University of Oregon and 2 Lewis & Clark College. Banners still popular, getting larger. Banners still popular, getting larger.
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Banner Ads Hinder Visual Search and Are Forgotten Moira Burke1, Nicholas Gorman2, Erik Nilsen2, and Anthony Hornof1 1University of Oregon and 2Lewis & Clark College
Do banners impact search? • “Banner blindness”: Only 20% of web users noticed any banners (Benway, 1998) • "An animation that appears alongside primary content will disrupt your readers' concentration and keep them from the objective of your site." (Web Style Guide, 1999) • Who is correct? • We investigate visual search speed and participants’ recall of banners
Search task Search for linked news headlines. Analogous to:
Search task, cont’d Our search area:
Search task cont’d • Two kinds searches: literal and semantic precues
Search task cont’d • Two kinds searches: literal and semantic precues • Three kinds of banners blank animated static
Search task cont’d • Two kinds searches: literal and semantic precues • Three kinds of banners • Two banner placements: • top of search area • covering a random line in search area
Search task cont’d • Two kinds searches: literal and semantic precues • Three kinds of banners • Two banner placements: • top of search area • covering a random line in search area • 2 blocks (by precue type)41 trials per block12 headline locations x 3 banner types + 5 practice
Surprise! A memory test • Did you see this banner? Yes / No • 60 banners40 appeared, 20 didn’tHalf animated, half static • Told some banners were from experiment; others were not
Results: Search Time Animated and static were 7% slower than blank (literal condition) Literal precue Banner Type Mean Search Time (ms) Blank 2040 Static 2169 Animated 2193 Significant difference p<.005 Semantic precue Banner Type Mean Search Time (ms) Blank 6065 Static 6210 Animated 6110 Not significant, but similar trend
Results: Memory • Overall, memory quite poor (Bayles, CHI 2002) • 20.1% hit rate (100% is perfect) • 20.2% false alarm rate (0% is perfect) • Difficulty of search didn’t affect recall • Top banners remembered significantly better than randomly-placed banners
Results: Memory cont’d • Signal Detection Theory to correct for guessing strategies of participants • Transform hit and false alarm rates into single measure of memory strength: d' • d' positive for static bannersd' n.s. different than zero for animated • Bottom line: Animated ads harder to recall
Summary and future work Who was right? • Banner ads distract • But people don’t remember them • Animation makes recall even worse • Currently analyzing eye-tracking data • So far: People don’t look at banners, except by accident