| Source |
Title |
| Rocky Mountain Communication Review |
Productivity
and Multi-Screen Displays |
Conclusion: "Respondents got on task quicker, did the work faster,
and got more of the work done with fewer errors in
multi-screen configurations than with a single screen.
They were 6 percent quicker to task, 7 percent faster
on task, generated 10 percent more production, were
16 percent faster in production, had 33 percent fewer
errors, and were 18 percent faster in errorless
production. These gains are achieved by turning on
a monitor and five minutes of training."
 |
| 1FX Palo Alto Laboratory, Harvard Design School |
Large
Display Research Overview |
| National Safety Council |
Framework
for effective use of multiple display |
| Microsoft Research |
Toward
Characterizing the Productivity Benefits of Very Large Displays |
| User Interface Software and Technology |
Support
For Multitasking and Background Awareness Using Interactive Peripheral Displays |
| Microsoft Research |
Partitioning
Digital Worlds: Focal and Peripheral Awareness in Multiple Monitor Use |
| Microsoft Research |
Display
Space Usage and Window Management Operation Comparisons between Single Monitor and Multiple Monitor
Users |
| CNNMoney.com |
How
I Work: Bill Gates |
| Accenture Technology Labs |
UniCast,
OutCast & GroupCast: Three Steps Toward Ubiquitous, Peripheral Displays |
| Dept. of Computer Science University of Toronto |
Interaction Techniques for 3D Modeling on Large Displays |
| Microsoft Research |
WinCuts: Manipulating Arbitrary Window Regions for more Effective Use of Screen Space |
| Computer World |
WinCuts:
Dual-monitor users passionate about benefits of having more than one |