Ambient Rabbits Likeability of Embodied Ambient Displays

Author(s):  
Thomas Mirlacher ◽  
Roland Buchner ◽  
Florian Förster ◽  
Astrid Weiss ◽  
Manfred Tscheligi
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Reitberger ◽  
Christoph Obermair ◽  
Bernd Ploderer ◽  
Alexander Meschtscherjakov ◽  
Manfred Tscheligi

Author(s):  
Xiaobin Shen ◽  
Andrew Vande Moere ◽  
Peter Eades ◽  
Seok-Hee Hong

This article is motivated by two evaluation case studies of ambient information displays. Firstly, an intrusive evaluation of a display called MoneyColor concentrates on the relationship between “distraction” and “comprehension”. This revealed that the comprehension is in direct proportion to display-distraction, but there is no clear relationship between comprehension and self-interruption. Secondly, a non-intrusive evaluation of a display called Fisherman described a quantitative measurement of user “interest” and applied this measurement to investigate “evaluation time” issue. These experiments give some insight into number of issues in evaluation of ambient displays.


Author(s):  
Mark Shepard

What happens to urban space given a hypothetical future where all information loses its body, that is, when it is offloaded from the material substrate of the physical city1 to the personal, portable, or ambient displays of tomorrow’s urban information systems? This chapter explores the spatial, technological and social implications of an extreme urban informatics regime. It investigates the total virtualization of the marks, signage, signaling and display systems by which we locate, orient ourselves, and navigate through the city. Taking as a vehicle a series of digitally manipulated photographs of specific locations in New York, this study analyzes the environmental impact of a pervasive evacuation of information–at various sites and scales–from the sidewalks, buildings, streets, intersections, infrastructures and public spaces of a fictional future De-saturated City.


Author(s):  
Jennifer Mankoff ◽  
Anind K. Dey ◽  
Gary Hsieh ◽  
Julie Kientz ◽  
Scott Lederer ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 132-138
Author(s):  
Jason Powell ◽  
Kris Chesky

Student musicians are at risk for noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) as they develop skills and perform during instructional activities. Studies using longitudinal dosimeter data show that pedagogical procedures and instructor behaviors are highly predictive of NIHL risk, thus implying the need for innovative approaches to increase instructor competency in managing instructional activities without interfering with artistic and academic freedom. Ambient information systems, an emerging trend in human-computer interaction that infuses psychological behavioral theories into technologies, can help construct informative risk-regulating systems. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of introducing an ambient information system into the ensemble setting. The system used two ambient displays and a counterbalanced within-subjects treatment study design with six jazz ensemble instructors to determine if the system could induce a behavior change that alters trends in measures resulting from dosimeter data. This study assessed efficacy using time series analysis to determine changes in eight statistical measures of behavior over a 9-wk period. Analysis showed that the system was effective, as all instructors showed changes in a combination of measures. This study is in an important step in developing non-interfering technology to reduce NIHL among academic musicians.


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