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KLM is not the only technique for evaluating interfaces, but it can be used to compare the speed of two different interfaces designed to accomplish the same task.
==External links==
*[http://www.cc.gatech.edu/classes/cs6751_97_fall/projects/closet2000+/FinalEssays/goms.html GOMS Analysis Techniques - Final Essay]
*[http://www.cs.umd.edu/class/fall2002/cmsc838s/tichi/goms.html GOMS by Lorin Hochstein]
*[http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~bej/cogtool/ The CogTool project] at [[Carnegie Mellon University]]
*[http://betacantrips.com/projects/hci-howto/html/ar01s03.html KLM-GOMS by Ethan Glasser-Camp]
==
{{Harvard reference
| Surname1=Card | Given1=S.K.
| Surname2=Thomas | Given2=T.P.
| Surname3=Newall | Given3=A.
| Title = The Psychology of Human-Computer Interaction
| Publisher = Lawrence Erbaum Associates
| Place = London
| Year = 1983
| ID = ISBN 0-89859-243-7 }}
{{Harvard reference
| Surname1=Kieras | Given1=D.
| Title = Using the Keystroke-Level Model to Estimate Execution Times
| Publisher = On-line handout
| Year = 1993, 2001
| URL = http://courses.wccnet.edu/~jwithrow/docs/klm.pdf
| URL = ftp://www.eecs.umich.edu/people/kieras/GOMS/KLM.pdf }}
[[Category:Human-computer interaction]]
{{comp-sci-stub}}
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