Forwarding a note from Charline, who is commenting on a recent trip to the CHI conference. Mark Today: A couple of interesting presentations about *SOUND Artificial Subtle Expressions: Intuitive Notification Methodology of Artefacts. *Takanori Komatsu, Shinshu University, Seiji Yamada, National Institute of Informatics, Kazuki Kobayashi, Shinshu University, Kotaro Funakoshi, Mikio Nakano, HRIJ Authors discussed how artificial subtle expressions, simple and low-cost expressions like beeping sounds or blinking LEDs, could convey the internal states of artifacts to users like non verbal information. In user testing, they found that people could read emotions in sounds and could decode sound according to their pitch, duration and intensity. *Soundnet: Investigating a Language Composed of environmental sounds. *Xiaojuan Ma, Christiane Fellbaum, Perry Cook, Princeton University. This presents a project that aims at developing a sound language based on environmental sounds that we hear everyday. They are creating sound vocabulary (nouns, adjectives, verbs) and create audible sentences and concepts, in addition to sound icons! She works on aphasia, but I think her research could have some interesting applications. http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~xm/home/ These two papers appear very relevant to the multitasking paper I mentioned yesterday. You will remember that in that paper, each task had a coloured dot that indicated the level of completion of the task as a form of notification. Maybe sound could be used to convey the states of various tasks. *MOBILE Mobile taskflow in context: A screenshot study of smarphone usage. *Amy K. Karlson, Shamsi T. Iqbal, Brian Meyers, Microsoft Research USA. Gonzalo Ramos, Kathy Lee, Microsoft USA, John C. Tang, Microsoft Research USA Great presentation focusing on task flow beyond the desktop. The authors were interested in the fact that the mobile phone is perceived by designers as an extension of the computer. For example, you get email on your phone which is traditionally a task associated with computers. But, the phone is not a small computer. There is, in fact, an asymmetry of task flow between the 2 devices. Phones are used mainly for reading, deleting and short replies. Users have devised many work arounds to follow up with email tasks that start on the phone. What users did on their phone: * Email * Web * File management * Scheduling * Social networking * Media * Map There are many contextual constraints when using mobile phone: Many sources of interruptions and disruptions like network failure, output problems, input problems, missing functions, environment (for example, start an email on the bus and reach destination before it is completed), cost/benefit choices that will result from time to time in abandoning the task altogether. What frustrated users most is when they cannot finish tasks that need to be attended to immediately or that lose their relevance later. By contrast, tasks like email and web searches that keep their relevance are not perceived as so frustrating. Media and maps were reported as being the most frustrating. Lessons learned: * Mobile task interruptions are inevitable - Design for interruption (provide saving states, reminders, etc.) * Some tasks suspensions are deliberate, for example, users read on one device and answer on another - Design tasks to decompose into travel-size chunks. * Moving to PC to resume a task is common - Design for migration * State syncing is not enough - Design for the context of state changes. Distinguish, for example, between resuming a task and restarting a task. Important to think in terms of 'mobilizable chunks'. These design implications apply more generally to multi-device usage. These are the highlights for today! C. -- *CHARLINE POIRIER* *User Research Programme Lead* *Canonical* *27th floor, 21-24 Millbank Tower* *London SW1P 4QP UK * *Tel: +44 (0) 20 7630 2491* *Mob: +44 (0) 78 8695 4514* *www.Ubuntu.com <http://www.Ubuntu.com/> <http://www.Ubuntu.com/>* *www.Canonical.com <http://www.Canonical.com/>*
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature