Gestures all around us: differences in social acceptability perceptions of gesture based interfaces

Rico, J. and Brewster, S.A. (2009) Gestures all around us: differences in social acceptability perceptions of gesture based interfaces. In: MobileHCI '09 Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction with Mobile Devices and Services, Bonn, Germany, 5-18 Sep 2009. ACM New York: New York, NY, USA. ISBN 9781605582818

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Abstract

Gesture based interfaces provide a new way for us to interact with mobile devices, but also require us to make new decisions about how we feel about this new technology and which gestures we decide are usable and appropriate. These decisions are based on the social and public settings where these devices are used on a daily basis. Our ideas about which gestures are socially acceptable or not are an important factor in whether or not these gestures will be adopted. The ways in which users evaluate social acceptability is not only highly variable, but with drastically different results amongst different users. These differences are not dependant on factors such as age, gender, occupation, geographic location, or previous technology usage. Future work into the social acceptability perceptions of users will focus on personality traits as a new way of understanding how social acceptability is determined.

Item Type:Book Sections
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Williamson, Dr Julie and Brewster, Professor Stephen
Authors: Rico, J., and Brewster, S.A.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > School of Computing Science
Publisher:ACM New York
ISBN:9781605582818

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