“Where is history”: Toward Designing a Voice Assistant to help Older Adults locate Interface Features quickly

要旨

Older adults often struggle to locate a function quickly in feature-rich user interfaces (UIs). Mobile UIs not only pack a ton of features in a small screen but also get frequent updates to their visual layouts—thereby exacerbating the problem. This paper explores a design solution where users could search for a UI feature using spoken-word queries. We investigated: 1) what type of questions older users ask when facing interaction challenges in unfamiliar scenarios, 2) how those query types compare with younger users' inquiries, and 3) how older adults use a voice assistant design probe in a Wizard-of-Oz (WoZ) study. Results reveal five query types when verbally articulating interaction issues: validation, directed and undirected informational, navigational, and conceptual. In the WoZ study, older users typically asked for help following a series of non-unique or off-task feature selections (n = 13/15), and in 77% of those instances, they completed the task in the next interaction.

著者
Ja Eun Yu
University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Natalie Parde
University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Debaleena Chattopadhyay
University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States
論文URL

https://doi.org/10.1145/3544548.3581447

動画

会議: CHI 2023

The ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (https://chi2023.acm.org/)

セッション: Voice Interaction / Smart Assistants

Room Y03+Y04
6 件の発表
2023-04-25 01:35:00
2023-04-25 03:00:00