Visual cues : changing how people perceive smart systems' performance

In this thesis, we report twelve studies. In more detail, four lab studies and eight follow-up studies on the crowd-sourcing platform designed to investigate the potential of visual cues to influence users' perception of three smart systems: a vacuum robot, a handwriting recognition and a part-...

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Main Author: Garcia Garcia, Pedro
Other Authors: Ramchurn, Sarvapali ; Costanza, Enrico ; Nowacka, Diana ; Verame, Jhim K. M.
Published: University of Southampton 2017
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.759229
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7592292019-02-05T03:16:30ZVisual cues : changing how people perceive smart systems' performanceGarcia Garcia, PedroRamchurn, Sarvapali ; Costanza, Enrico ; Nowacka, Diana ; Verame, Jhim K. M.2017In this thesis, we report twelve studies. In more detail, four lab studies and eight follow-up studies on the crowd-sourcing platform designed to investigate the potential of visual cues to influence users' perception of three smart systems: a vacuum robot, a handwriting recognition and a part-of-speech tagging system. The findings from the first three studies indicate that physical motion cues can influence people's perception of vacuum robots' performance. The subsequent three studies indicate that indeed animation cues can influence a participant's perception of handwriting recognition and part-of-speech tagging systems' performance. The subsequent three studies, designed to try and identify an explanation of this effect, suggest that it is related to the participants' mental model of the smart system. The last three studies were designed to characterise the effect more in detail, and they revealed that different detail of animation does not seem to create substantial differences and that the effect persists even when the system's performance decreases, but only when the difference in performance level between the systems being compared is small. Finally, the last study focused on analysing the effect of varying the speed of the animation, and we found that the effect persists even the variation of speed in the animation.University of Southamptonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.759229https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/426048/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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sources NDLTD
description In this thesis, we report twelve studies. In more detail, four lab studies and eight follow-up studies on the crowd-sourcing platform designed to investigate the potential of visual cues to influence users' perception of three smart systems: a vacuum robot, a handwriting recognition and a part-of-speech tagging system. The findings from the first three studies indicate that physical motion cues can influence people's perception of vacuum robots' performance. The subsequent three studies indicate that indeed animation cues can influence a participant's perception of handwriting recognition and part-of-speech tagging systems' performance. The subsequent three studies, designed to try and identify an explanation of this effect, suggest that it is related to the participants' mental model of the smart system. The last three studies were designed to characterise the effect more in detail, and they revealed that different detail of animation does not seem to create substantial differences and that the effect persists even when the system's performance decreases, but only when the difference in performance level between the systems being compared is small. Finally, the last study focused on analysing the effect of varying the speed of the animation, and we found that the effect persists even the variation of speed in the animation.
author2 Ramchurn, Sarvapali ; Costanza, Enrico ; Nowacka, Diana ; Verame, Jhim K. M.
author_facet Ramchurn, Sarvapali ; Costanza, Enrico ; Nowacka, Diana ; Verame, Jhim K. M.
Garcia Garcia, Pedro
author Garcia Garcia, Pedro
spellingShingle Garcia Garcia, Pedro
Visual cues : changing how people perceive smart systems' performance
author_sort Garcia Garcia, Pedro
title Visual cues : changing how people perceive smart systems' performance
title_short Visual cues : changing how people perceive smart systems' performance
title_full Visual cues : changing how people perceive smart systems' performance
title_fullStr Visual cues : changing how people perceive smart systems' performance
title_full_unstemmed Visual cues : changing how people perceive smart systems' performance
title_sort visual cues : changing how people perceive smart systems' performance
publisher University of Southampton
publishDate 2017
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.759229
work_keys_str_mv AT garciagarciapedro visualcueschanginghowpeopleperceivesmartsystemsperformance
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