The threshold for most people is slightly lower than a quarter second, but it's certainly the case that above a quarter-second users will notice the delay[0].
However, people may be primed for longer delays still seeming instant. e.g. Smartphones for many years had a built-in 300ms delay on any click event, and even without that event typically still have delays on many 'instant' actions.
So while the delay will be registered as being present, it may not be registered as "this site is slow" but "it's just a natural delay".
I completely agree, a quarter of a second is absolutely not instantaneous.
Especially not to oddballs like me that has some kind of perceptive 'bug', it's like I lack a 'motion filter'. One effect being that movement in computer games doesn't feel completely fluid until the refresh rate is close to 200Hz.
Before internet and slow loading web pages might have lowered peoples expectations, I remember Human-computer interaction guidelines stating that < 0.1 was experienced as instantaneous in almost all cases. Above 1s without feedback started to cause measurable stress in test subjects.
Since this was before computers were ubiquitous, it's probably a good measure for how we react on a more basal, subconscious level. Anything measured today is likely to be include learned expectations, so a quarter of a second seems like reasonable learned expectation of the perception of instantaneous in that particular context.
This isn't about raw physics and biology but rather the use of business applications by users, specifically with regards to analytics and exploratory queries.
Anything less than a second to run a query and return results is considered "instant" (also sometimes "interactive") for analysis.
WorkLifeBalance|8 years ago
However, people may be primed for longer delays still seeming instant. e.g. Smartphones for many years had a built-in 300ms delay on any click event, and even without that event typically still have delays on many 'instant' actions.
So while the delay will be registered as being present, it may not be registered as "this site is slow" but "it's just a natural delay".
[0] https://psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/1664/what-is-...
spyder|8 years ago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=52&v=vOvQCPLkPt4
mickronome|8 years ago
Especially not to oddballs like me that has some kind of perceptive 'bug', it's like I lack a 'motion filter'. One effect being that movement in computer games doesn't feel completely fluid until the refresh rate is close to 200Hz.
Before internet and slow loading web pages might have lowered peoples expectations, I remember Human-computer interaction guidelines stating that < 0.1 was experienced as instantaneous in almost all cases. Above 1s without feedback started to cause measurable stress in test subjects.
Since this was before computers were ubiquitous, it's probably a good measure for how we react on a more basal, subconscious level. Anything measured today is likely to be include learned expectations, so a quarter of a second seems like reasonable learned expectation of the perception of instantaneous in that particular context.
manigandham|8 years ago
Anything less than a second to run a query and return results is considered "instant" (also sometimes "interactive") for analysis.
thinkMOAR|8 years ago
rplnt|8 years ago
nimchimpsky|8 years ago
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