Tactile Communication in Extreme Contexts: Exploring the Design Space Through Kiteboarding - Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 2015
Conference Papers Year : 2015

Tactile Communication in Extreme Contexts: Exploring the Design Space Through Kiteboarding

André Schmidt
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  • PersonId : 1020023
Mads Kleemann
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  • PersonId : 1020024
Timothy Merritt
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  • PersonId : 1004949
Ted Selker
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  • PersonId : 1020025

Abstract

This paper uses kiteboarding as an experimental platform to find ways in which technologies could support communication needs in mentally and physically demanding contexts. A kite control bar with embedded sensors and actuators communicates instructions through voice or tactile cues to explore facilitating communication for control guidance. Tactile cues were shown to be productive in changing behavior. Voice, however, communicated planning models and directional guidance better than tactile cues. Still, voice may negatively impact experience. The experiments highlight the need for better ways for communication tools to support mental models.
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hal-01610782 , version 1 (05-10-2017)

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André Schmidt, Mads Kleemann, Timothy Merritt, Ted Selker. Tactile Communication in Extreme Contexts: Exploring the Design Space Through Kiteboarding. 15th Human-Computer Interaction (INTERACT), Sep 2015, Bamberg, Germany. pp.37-54, ⟨10.1007/978-3-319-22723-8_4⟩. ⟨hal-01610782⟩
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