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Chapter #8. Make Buttons a Sensible Size and Group Them Together by Function
The US psychologist Paul Fitts wrote a paper in 1954 called The information capacity of the human motor system in controlling the amplitude of movement (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13174710) which was published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology. Fitts' work would go on to be one of the most well-studied models of human motion.
To dumb Fitts' Law down for us UX people, rather than psychologists, the core concept that applies to us is:
"The time required to rapidly move to a target area is a function of the ratio between the distance to the target and the size of the target."
If you're building a user interface, it's really simple to do this: make buttons big enough, and close enough, that users can efficiently find them and move between them:
![Make Buttons a Sensible Size and Group Them Together by Function](https://epubservercos.yuewen.com/DDFFBF/19470388901541206/epubprivate/OEBPS/Images/B09472_08_01.jpg?sign=1738780027-fEXnn02GKYIg7cIUNkHx3E0JG5AglgrZ-0-755670020b55533c6e7f63e1490c37d8)
Which is easier to use and less error-prone?
A great anti-pattern example is those tiny "x" buttons to close pop-up ads: it's almost as if the advertisers don't want you to close them…