A study of tabbed browsing among mozilla firefox users

We present a study which investigated how and why users of Mozilla Firefox use multiple tabs and windows during web browsing. The detailed web browsing usage of 21 participants was logged over a period of 13 to 21 days each, and was supplemented by qualitative data from diary entries and interviews. Through an examination of several measures of their tab usage, we show that our participants had a strong preference for the use of tabs rather than multiple windows. We report the reasons they cited for using tabs, and the advantages over multiple windows. We identify several common tab usage patterns which browsers could explicitly support. Finally, we look at how tab usage affects web page revisitation. Most of our participants switched tabs more often than they used the back button, making tab switching the second most important navigation mechanism in the browser, after link clicking.

[1]  James E. Pitkow,et al.  Characterizing Browsing Strategies in the World-Wide Web , 1995, Comput. Networks ISDN Syst..

[2]  Michael A. Shepherd,et al.  The impact of task on the usage of web browser navigation mechanisms , 2006, Graphics Interface.

[3]  Eelco Herder,et al.  Web page revisitation revisited: implications of a long-term click-stream study of browser usage , 2007, CHI.

[4]  Andy Cockburn,et al.  Pushing back: evaluating a new behaviour for the back and forward buttons in web browsers , 2002, Int. J. Hum. Comput. Stud..

[5]  Brian Detlor,et al.  Information Seeking on the Web: An Integrated Model of Browsing and Searching , 2000, First Monday.

[6]  Eelco Herder,et al.  Off the beaten tracks: exploring three aspects of web navigation , 2006, WWW '06.

[7]  Saul Greenberg,et al.  How people revisit web pages: empirical findings and implications for the design of history systems , 1997, Int. J. Hum. Comput. Stud..

[8]  Kari-Jouko Räihä,et al.  The advantages of a cross-session web workspace , 2005, CHI Extended Abstracts.

[9]  Susan T. Dumais,et al.  Large scale analysis of web revisitation patterns , 2008, CHI.

[10]  Abigail Sellen,et al.  How knowledge workers use the web , 2002, CHI.

[11]  Andy Cockburn,et al.  Improving Web Page Revisitation: Analysis, Design, and Evaluation , 2002 .

[12]  Kerry Rodden,et al.  Smartback: supporting users in back navigation , 2004, WWW '04.

[13]  Michael D. Byrne,et al.  The tangled Web we wove: a taskonomy of WWW use , 1999, CHI '99.

[14]  George G. Robertson,et al.  The WebBook and the Web Forager: an information workspace for the World-Wide Web , 1996, CHI.

[15]  Eelco Herder,et al.  Not quite the average: An empirical study of Web use , 2008, TWEB.