A series of experiments was conducted to evaluate whether simple hyperlink
annotations-traffic lights that represent Internet connection speeds-can fa
cilitate web navigation. Traffic lights are small red, yellow or green imag
es added around the anchor text of each link indicating its connection spee
d, red for slow, yellow for somewhat fast and green for fastest. The first
two experiments showed that traffic lights do not facilitate perceptual pro
cesses involved in web navigation (i.e. link localization and visual search
). However, traffic lights also do not distract from the process of finding
links in hypertext documents and, thus have no perceptual performance cost
. The third experiment showed that traffic lights facilitate web navigation
performance by improving link evaluation and decision processes. This impr
ovement is particularly marked when link relevance is low or undifferentiat
ed. It was concluded that supplying users with information about Internet c
onnection speeds improves web navigation performance. Thus, traffic lights
provide functional cues for efficiently navigating the web. (C) 1999 Academ
ic Press.