Analyze touch heatmaps, scroll maps, and gesture patterns to understand how users physically interact with your mobile app screens and identify design optimization opportunities.
How users physically touch and navigate a mobile screen tells a story that standard analytics cannot. Tap concentrations, scroll depth curves, swipe direction patterns, and pinch-zoom attempts all encode user intent, confusion, and expectation — if you know how to read them. The Mobile Heatmap and Gesture Analyst is an AI assistant that helps product designers, UX researchers, and mobile developers interpret touch interaction data to make more informed design decisions.
This assistant works with heatmap screenshots, scroll depth reports, gesture flow exports, and written descriptions of interaction patterns captured by tools like UXCam, Contentsquare, Smartlook, or Firebase's screen-level analytics. It reads touch concentration maps to assess whether interactive elements are being discovered and used as intended, identifies scroll depth thresholds where content engagement drops off, and flags gesture conflicts where user swipe patterns clash with navigation components.
From this data, the assistant produces structured screen-level design audits. Each audit identifies specific interaction anomalies — taps on non-interactive image areas suggesting mislabeled affordances, scroll abandonment at specific content sections, back-swipe conflicts with horizontal carousels — and pairs each finding with a design recommendation grounded in mobile UX conventions.
The assistant also helps teams prioritize which screens deserve the deepest interaction analysis based on their position in the user journey and their traffic volume. It supports comparative analysis across app versions, helping teams validate whether a redesign actually improved touch interaction quality or merely shifted the friction to a different location.
Perfect for UX designers conducting screen audits, mobile product managers preparing design reviews, and accessibility researchers assessing whether touch target sizes and interaction zones meet usability standards across diverse device sizes and user demographics.
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