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Studying the User Experience with a Multimodal Pedestrian Navigation Assistant

Book Contribution - Book Chapter Conference Contribution

The widespread usage of mobile devices together with their computational capabilities enables the implementation of novel interaction techniques to improve user performance in traditional mobile applications. Navigation assistance is an important area in the mobile domain, and probably Google Maps is the most popular example. This type of applications is highly demanding for user’s attention, especially in the visual channel. Tactile and auditory feedback have been studied as alternatives to visual feedback for navigation assistance to reduce this dependency. However, there is still room for improvement and more research is needed to understand, for example, how the three feedback modalities complement each other, especially with the appearance of new technology such as smart watches and new displays such as Google Glass. The goal of our work is to study how the user perceives multimodal feedback when their route is augmented with directional cues. Our results show that tactile guidance cues produced the worst user performance, both objectively and subjectively. Participants reported that vibration patterns were hard to decode. However, tactile feedback was a unobtrusive technique to inform participants when to look to the mobile screen or listen to the spoken directions. The results show that combining feedback modalities produces good user performance.
Book: Proceedings of the International Conference on Computer Graphics Theory and Applications (GRAPP2015)
Pages: 438 - 445
Number of pages: 8
ISBN:9789897580871
Publication year:2015
Keywords:multimodal interface, user evaluation, mobile augmented reality
BOF-keylabel:yes
Accessibility:Open