Four Replications of a User-Defined Gesture Study with Smart Rings
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| Název: | Four Replications of a User-Defined Gesture Study with Smart Rings |
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| Autoři: | Vanderdonckt, Jean, Vatavu, Radu-Daniel, 27th International Conference on Mobile Human-Computer Interaction |
| Přispěvatelé: | UCL - SSH/LouRIM - Louvain Research Institute in Management and Organizations |
| Zdroj: | Adjunct Proceedings of the 27th International Conference on Mobile Human-Computer Interaction. :1-6 |
| Informace o vydavateli: | ACM, 2025. |
| Rok vydání: | 2025 |
| Témata: | Gestural input, Empirical studies in interaction design, User interface design, Mobile devices, Participatory design, Empirical studies in ubiquitous and mobile computing |
| Popis: | Empirical findings in gesture-based interaction often stem from highly controlled experimental settings, which raises concerns about their generalizability. To explore how variations in such settings influence discoveries on user-defined gestures, we selected an end-user elicitation study involving smart rings that had been replicated at least once. By reusing the same stimuli, equipment, and data collection method, we conducted four new replications of the original study, involving a total of 120 participants across four different research teams. Our results show that smart ring gestures elicited in these replications overlap only partially, with differences in agreement rate, thinking time, and goodness of fit with corresponding system functions. We argue that systematic replication of gesture elicitation studies is essential for generalizable gesture sets. |
| Druh dokumentu: | Article Conference object |
| DOI: | 10.1145/3737821.3749582 |
| Přístupová URL adresa: | https://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/303890 |
| Přístupové číslo: | edsair.doi.dedup.....141d12bdabca414126e052cb50ac69fa |
| Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
| Abstrakt: | Empirical findings in gesture-based interaction often stem from highly controlled experimental settings, which raises concerns about their generalizability. To explore how variations in such settings influence discoveries on user-defined gestures, we selected an end-user elicitation study involving smart rings that had been replicated at least once. By reusing the same stimuli, equipment, and data collection method, we conducted four new replications of the original study, involving a total of 120 participants across four different research teams. Our results show that smart ring gestures elicited in these replications overlap only partially, with differences in agreement rate, thinking time, and goodness of fit with corresponding system functions. We argue that systematic replication of gesture elicitation studies is essential for generalizable gesture sets. |
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| DOI: | 10.1145/3737821.3749582 |
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