Modelling typing disfluencies as finite mixture process University of Antwerp
To writing anything on a keyboard at all requires us to know first what to type, then to activate motor programmes for finger movements, and execute these. An interruption in the information flow at any of these stages leads to disfluencies. To capture this combination of fluent typing and typing hesitations, researchers calculate different measures from keystroke-latency data-such as mean inter-keystroke interval and pause frequencies. There ...