Title :
Interruptions as multimodal outputs: which are the less disruptive?
Author :
Arroyo, Ernesto ; Selker, Ted ; Stouffs, Alexandre
Author_Institution :
Media Lab., MIT, USA
Abstract :
This paper describes exploratory studies of interruption modalities and disruptiveness. Five interruption modalities were compared: heat, smell, sound, vibration, and light. Much more notable than the differences between modalities was the differences between people. We found that subjects´ sensitiveness depended on their previous life exposure to the modalities. Individual differences greatly control the effect of interrupting stimuli. We show that is possible to build a multimodal adaptive interruption interface, such interfaces would dynamically select the output interruption modality to use based on its effectiveness on a particular user.
Keywords :
human factors; user interfaces; disruptiveness; heat; interruption modalities; light; multimodal adaptive interruption interface; multimodal outputs; self-adaptive interfaces; smell; sound; vibration; Adaptive control; Computer displays; Computer interfaces; Context; Haptic interfaces; Humans; Multitasking; Olfactory; Programmable control; Speech;
Conference_Titel :
Multimodal Interfaces, 2002. Proceedings. Fourth IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1834-6
DOI :
10.1109/ICMI.2002.1167043