Mapping Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives for Understanding Speech Interface Interactions


Conference proceedings


L. Clark, Benjamin R. Cowan, Justin Edwards, Cosmin Munteanu, Christine Murad, M. Aylett, Roger K. Moore, Jens Edlund, Éva Székely, P. Healey, N. Harte, Ilaria Torre, Philip R. Doyle
CHI Extended Abstracts, 2019

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APA   Click to copy
Clark, L., Cowan, B. R., Edwards, J., Munteanu, C., Murad, C., Aylett, M., … Doyle, P. R. (2019). Mapping Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives for Understanding Speech Interface Interactions. CHI Extended Abstracts.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Clark, L., Benjamin R. Cowan, Justin Edwards, Cosmin Munteanu, Christine Murad, M. Aylett, Roger K. Moore, et al. Mapping Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives for Understanding Speech Interface Interactions. CHI Extended Abstracts, 2019.


MLA   Click to copy
Clark, L., et al. “Mapping Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives for Understanding Speech Interface Interactions.” CHI Extended Abstracts, 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@proceedings{l2019a,
  title = {Mapping Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives for Understanding Speech Interface Interactions},
  year = {2019},
  journal = {CHI Extended Abstracts},
  author = {Clark, L. and Cowan, Benjamin R. and Edwards, Justin and Munteanu, Cosmin and Murad, Christine and Aylett, M. and Moore, Roger K. and Edlund, Jens and Székely, Éva and Healey, P. and Harte, N. and Torre, Ilaria and Doyle, Philip R.}
}

Abstract

The use of speech as an interaction modality has grown considerably through the integration of Intelligent Personal Assistants (IPAs- e.g. Siri, Google Assistant) into smartphones and voice based devices (e.g. Amazon Echo). However, there remain significant gaps in using theoretical frameworks to understand user behaviours and choices and how they may applied to specific speech interface interactions. This part-day multidisciplinary workshop aims to critically map out and evaluate theoretical frameworks and methodological approaches across a number of disciplines and establish directions for new paradigms in understanding speech interface user behaviour. In doing so, we will bring together participants from HCI and other speech related domains to establish a cohesive, diverse and collaborative community of researchers from academia and industry with interest in exploring theoretical and methodological issues in the field.