Main Overview
Learn how many participants joined your study and whether they completed it. Additionaly you can see the success rate they achieved together with the time they needed and learn how lost they were during the process.
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In this help, we’ll explain the information found in the Overview tab.
This bar chart breaks down the answers to each task depending on their ending status.
The skips will only appear in the results if you allowed respondents to skip tasks in the task setup.
The Lostness metric is calculated for each of your tasks as a gauge of effectiveness of your website’s navigation. It tells you how lost your users get when they use your website (when they solve your tasks). Lostness is based on the difference between the number of pages visited by the user and the minimum number of pages that need to be visited to solve the task (the optimal path). If you haven’t entered an optimal number in task setup, we automatically consider the minimum number of pages traversed by a respondent to be the optimal path. (However, this respondent may or may not also have been lost, which is why we recommend properly setting up the length of the optimal path for your tasks.)
Lostness is calculated as the average lostness of all respondents who successfully completed the task. A high lostness score (closer to 1) means that users are very lost and have a problem with solving the task. A low score (closer to 0) means users can solve the task relatively easily.
If there are respondents who completed the task in a shorter number of steps than the optimal path you specified in setup, their lostness has value of ‘0!’ and is not included in the average. Average lostness can have the value of ‘0!’ if all successful respondents have lostness of ‘0!’. If there are no successful respondents, lostness will show ‘No data’.
Avg. page views – the average number of unique pages is also calculated only from respondents who completed the task successfully.
Learn how many participants joined your study and whether they completed it. Additionaly you can see the success rate they achieved together with the time they needed and learn how lost they were during the process.
Learn how many participants joined your study broken down by their device type, operating system, browser and screen resolution.