Lecture Notes in Computer Science 10514 - Accueil - Inria
Transcript of Lecture Notes in Computer Science 10514 - Accueil - Inria
Lecture Notes in Computer Science 10514
Commenced Publication in 1973Founding and Former Series Editors:Gerhard Goos, Juris Hartmanis, and Jan van Leeuwen
Editorial Board
David HutchisonLancaster University, Lancaster, UK
Takeo KanadeCarnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Josef KittlerUniversity of Surrey, Guildford, UK
Jon M. KleinbergCornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
Friedemann MatternETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
John C. MitchellStanford University, Stanford, CA, USA
Moni NaorWeizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel
C. Pandu RanganIndian Institute of Technology, Madras, India
Bernhard SteffenTU Dortmund University, Dortmund, Germany
Demetri TerzopoulosUniversity of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Doug TygarUniversity of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
Gerhard WeikumMax Planck Institute for Informatics, Saarbrücken, Germany
More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/7409
Regina Bernhaupt • Girish DalviAnirudha Joshi • Devanuj K. BalkrishanJacki O’Neill • Marco Winckler (Eds.)
Human-ComputerInteraction –
INTERACT 201716th IFIP TC 13 International ConferenceMumbai, India, September 25–29, 2017Proceedings, Part II
123
EditorsRegina BernhauptRuwido Austria GmbHNeumarkt am WallerseeAustria
Girish DalviIndian Institute of Technology BombayMumbaiIndia
Anirudha JoshiIndian Institute of Technology BombayMumbaiIndia
Devanuj K. BalkrishanIndian Institute of Technology BombayMumbaiIndia
Jacki O’NeillMicrosoft Research Centre IndiaBangaloreIndia
Marco WincklerUniversité Paul SabatierToulouseFrance
ISSN 0302-9743 ISSN 1611-3349 (electronic)Lecture Notes in Computer ScienceISBN 978-3-319-67683-8 ISBN 978-3-319-67684-5 (eBook)DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-67684-5
Library of Congress Control Number: 2017953425
LNCS Sublibrary: SL3 – Information Systems and Applications, incl. Internet/Web, and HCI
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Foreword
The 16th IFIP TC13 International Conference on Human–Computer Interaction,INTERACT 2017, took place during September 25–29, 2017, in Mumbai, India. Thisconference was held on the beautiful campus of the Indian Institute of Technology,Bombay (IIT Bombay) and the Industrial Design Centre (IDC) was the principal host.The conference was co-sponsored by the HCI Professionals Association of India andthe Computer Society of India, in cooperation with ACM and ACM SIGCHI. Thefinancial responsibility of INTERACT 2017 was taken up by the HCI ProfessionalsAssociation of India.
The International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) was created in 1960under the auspices of UNESCO. The Technical Committee 13 (TC13) of the IFIP aimsat developing the science and technology of human–computer interaction (HCI). TC13has representatives from 36 countries, apart from 16 expert members and observers.TC13 started the series of INTERACT conferences in 1984. These conferences havebeen an important showcase for researchers and practitioners in the field of HCI.Situated under the open, inclusive umbrella of the IFIP, INTERACT has been trulyinternational in its spirit and has attracted researchers from several countries and cul-tures. The venues of the INTERACT conferences over the years bear a testimony tothis inclusiveness.
In 2017, the venue was Mumbai. Located in western India, the city of Mumbai is thecapital of the state of Maharashtra. It is the financial, entertainment, and commercialcapital of the country and is the most populous city in India. Mumbaikars might addthat it is also the most hardworking.
The theme of INTERACT 2017 was “Global Thoughts, Local Designs.” The themewas designed to let HCI researchers respond to challenges emerging in the new age ofglobal connectivity where they often design products for users who are beyond theirborders belonging to distinctly different cultures. As organizers of the conference, wefocused our attention on four areas: India, developing countries, students, andresearch.
As the first INTERACT in the subcontinent, the conference offered a distinctlyIndian experience to its participants. The span of known history of India covers morethan 5,000 years. Today, India is the world’s largest democracy and a land of diversity.Modern technology co-exists with ancient traditions within the same city, often withinthe same family. Indians speak 22 official languages and hundreds of dialects. India isalso a hub of the information technology industry and a living laboratory of experi-ments with technology for developing countries.
INTERACT 2017 made a conscious effort to lower barriers that prevent people fromdeveloping countries from participating in conferences. Thinkers and optimists believethat all regions of the world can achieve human development goals. Information andcommunication technologies (ICTs) can support this process and empower people toachieve their full potential. Today ICT products have many new users and many new
uses, but also present new challenges and provide new opportunities. It is no surprisethat HCI researchers are showing great interest in these emergent users. INTERACT2017 provided a platform to explore these challenges and opportunities but also made iteasier for people from developing countries to participate. We also introduced a newtrack called Field Trips, which allowed participants to directly engage with stake-holders within the context of a developing country.
Students represent the future of our community. They bring in new energy,enthusiasm, and fresh ideas. But it is often hard for students to participate in interna-tional conferences. INTERACT 2017 made special efforts to bring students to theconference. The conference had low registration costs and several volunteeringopportunities. Thanks to our sponsors, we could provide several travel grants. Mostimportantly, INTERACT 2017 had special tracks such as Installations, a StudentDesign Consortium, and a Student Research Consortium that gave students theopportunity to showcase their work.
Finally, great research is the heart of a good conference. Like its predecessors,INTERACT 2017 aimed to bring together high-quality research. As a multidisciplinaryfield, HCI requires interaction and discussion among diverse people with differentinterest and background. The beginners and the experienced, theoreticians and prac-titioners, and people from diverse disciplines and different countries gathered togetherin Mumbai to learn from each other and to contribute to each other’s growth. We thankall the authors who chose INTERACT 2017 as the venue to publish their research.
We received a total of 571 submissions distributed in two peer-reviewed tracks, fivecurated tracks, and seven juried tracks. Of these, the following contributions wereaccepted:
• 68 Full Papers (peer reviewed)• 51 Short Papers (peer reviewed)• 13 Case Studies (curated)• 20 Industry Presentations (curated)• 7 Courses (curated)• 5 Demonstrations (curated)• 3 Panels (curated)• 9 Workshops (juried)• 7 Field Trips (juried)• 11 Interactive Posters (juried)• 9 Installations (juried)• 6 Doctoral Consortium (juried)• 15 Student Research Consortium (juried)• 6 Student Design Consortium (juried)
The acceptance rate for contributions received in the peer-reviewed tracks was 30.7%for full papers and 29.1% for short papers. In addition to full papers and short papers,the present proceedings feature contributions accepted in the form of case studies,courses, demonstrations, interactive posters, field trips, and workshops.
The final decision on acceptance or rejection of full papers was taken in a ProgramCommittee meeting held in Paris, France, in March 2017. The full-paper chairs, theassociate chairs, and the TC13 members participated in this meeting. The meeting
VI Foreword
discussed a consistent set of criteria to deal with inevitable differences among the largenumber of reviewers. The final decisions on other tracks were made by the corre-sponding track chairs and reviewers, often after additional electronic meetings anddiscussions.
INTERACT 2017 was made possible by the persistent efforts over several monthsby 49 chairs, 39 associate chairs, 55 student volunteers, and 499 reviewers. We thankthem all. Finally, we wish to express a special thank you to the proceedings publicationco-chairs, Marco Winckler and Devanuj Balkrishan, who did extraordinary work to puttogether four volumes of the main proceedings and one volume of adjunct proceedings.
September 2017 Anirudha JoshiGirish Dalvi
Marco Winckler
Foreword VII
IFIP TC13 (http://ifip-tc13.org/)
Established in 1989, the International Federation for Information Processing TechnicalCommittee on Human–Computer Interaction (IFIP TC 13) is an international com-mittee of 37 member national societies and 10 Working Groups, representing spe-cialists of the various disciplines contributing to the field of human–computerinteraction (HCI). This includes (among others) human factors, ergonomics, cognitivescience, computer science, and design. INTERACT is its flagship conference ofIFIP TC 13, staged biennially in different countries in the world. The first INTERACTconference was held in 1984 running triennially and became a biennial event in 1993.
IFIP TC 13 aims to develop the science, technology, and societal aspects of HCI by:encouraging empirical research; promoting the use of knowledge and methods from thehuman sciences in design and evaluation of computer systems; promoting betterunderstanding of the relation between formal design methods and system usability andacceptability; developing guidelines, models, and methods by which designers mayprovide better human-oriented computer systems; and, cooperating with other groups,inside and outside IFIP, to promote user-orientation and humanization in systemdesign. Thus, TC 13 seeks to improve interactions between people and computers, toencourage the growth of HCI research and its practice in industry and to disseminatethese benefits worldwide.
The main focus is to place the users at the center of the development process. Areasof study include: the problems people face when interacting with computers; the impactof technology deployment on people in individual and organizational contexts; thedeterminants of utility, usability, acceptability, and user experience; the appropriateallocation of tasks between computers and users especially in the case of automation;modeling the user, their tasks, and the interactive system to aid better system design;and harmonizing the computer to user characteristics and needs.
While the scope is thus set wide, with a tendency toward general principles ratherthan particular systems, it is recognized that progress will only be achieved throughboth general studies to advance theoretical understanding and specific studies onpractical issues (e.g., interface design standards, software system resilience, docu-mentation, training material, appropriateness of alternative interaction technologies,guidelines, the problems of integrating multimedia systems to match system needs, andorganizational practices, etc.).
In 2015, TC 13 approved the creation of a Steering Committee (SC) for theINTERACT conference. The SC is now in place, chaired by Jan Gulliksen and isresponsible for:
• Promoting and maintaining the INTERACT conference as the premiere venue forresearchers and practitioners interested in the topics of the conference (this requiresa refinement of the aforementioned topics)
• Ensuring the highest quality for the contents of the event
• Setting up the bidding process to handle the future INTERACT conferences;decision is made up at TC 13 level
• Providing advice to the current and future chairs and organizers of the INTERACTconference
• Providing data, tools and documents about previous conferences to the futureconference organizers
• Selecting the reviewing system to be used throughout the conference (as thisimpacts the entire set of reviewers)
• Resolving general issues involved with the INTERACT conference• Capitalizing history (good and bad practices)
In 1999, TC 13 initiated a special IFIP Award, the Brian Shackel Award, for the mostoutstanding contribution in the form of a refereed paper submitted to and delivered ateach INTERACT. The award draws attention to the need for a comprehensivehuman-centered approach in the design and use of information technology in which thehuman and social implications have been taken into account. In 2007, IFIP TC 13 alsolaunched an Accessibility Award to recognize an outstanding contribution in HCI withinternational impact dedicated to the field of accessibility for disabled users. In 2013IFIP TC 13 launched the Interaction Design for International Development (IDID)Award that recognizes the most outstanding contribution to the application of inter-active systems for social and economic development of people in developing countries.Since the process to decide the award takes place after papers are sent to the publisherfor publication, the awards are not identified in the proceedings.
IFIP TC 13 also recognizes pioneers in the area of HCI. An IFIP TC 13 pioneer isone who, through active participation in IFIP Technical Committees or related IFIPgroups, has made outstanding contributions to the educational, theoretical, technical,commercial, or professional aspects of analysis, design, construction, evaluation, anduse of interactive systems. IFIP TC 13 pioneers are appointed annually and awards arehanded over at the INTERACT conference.
IFIP TC 13 stimulates working events and activities through its Working Groups(WGs). Working Groups consist of HCI experts from many countries, who seek toexpand knowledge and find solutions to HCI issues and concerns within their domains.The list of Working Groups and their area of interest is given here.
WG13.1 (Education in HCI and HCI Curricula) aims to improve HCI education atall levels of higher education, coordinate and unite efforts to develop HCI curricula andpromote HCI teaching.
WG13.2 (Methodology for User-Centered System Design) aims to foster research,dissemination of information and good practice in the methodical application of HCI tosoftware engineering.
WG13.3 (HCI and Disability) aims to make HCI designers aware of the needs ofpeople with disabilities and encourage the development of information systems andtools permitting adaptation of interfaces to specific users.
WG13.4 (also WG2.7) (User Interface Engineering) investigates the nature, con-cepts, and construction of user interfaces for software systems, using a framework forreasoning about interactive systems and an engineering model for developing userinterfaces.
X IFIP TC13
WG 13.5 (Resilience, Reliability, Safety and Human Error in System Development)seeks a frame-work for studying human factors relating to systems failure, developsleading-edge techniques in hazard analysis and safety engineering of computer-basedsystems, and guides international accreditation activities for safety-critical systems.
WG13.6 (Human-Work Interaction Design) aims at establishing relationshipsbetween extensive empirical work-domain studies and HCI design. It promotes the useof knowledge, concepts, methods, and techniques that enable user studies to procure abetter apprehension of the complex interplay between individual, social, and organi-zational contexts and thereby a better understanding of how and why people work inthe ways that they do.
WG13.7 (Human–Computer Interaction and Visualization) aims to establish a studyand research program that will combine both scientific work and practical applicationsin the fields of HCI and visualization. It integrates several additional aspects of furtherresearch areas, such as scientific visualization, data mining, information design, com-puter graphics, cognition sciences, perception theory, or psychology, into thisapproach.
WG13.8 (Interaction Design and International Development) is currently working toreformulate its aims and scope.
WG13.9 (Interaction Design and Children) aims to support practitioners, regulators,and researchers to develop the study of interaction design and children across inter-national contexts.
WG13.10 (Human-Centered Technology for Sustainability) aims to promoteresearch, design, development, evaluation, and deployment of human-centered tech-nology to encourage sustainable use of resources in various domains.
New Working Groups are formed as areas of significance in HCI arise. Furtherinformation is available on the IFIP TC13 website at: http://ifip-tc13.org/
IFIP TC13 XI
IFIP TC13 Members
Officers
Chair
Philippe Palanque, France
Vice-chair for Growth and ReachOut INTERACT SteeringCommittee Chair
Jan Gulliksen, Sweden
Vice-chair for Working Groups
Simone D.J. Barbosa, Brazil
Vice-chair for Awards
Paula Kotze, South Africa
Treasurer
Virpi Roto, Finland
Secretary
Marco Winckler, France
Webmaster
Helen Petrie, UK
Country Representatives
AustraliaHenry B.L. DuhAustralian Computer Society
AustriaGeraldine FitzpatrickAustrian Computer Society
BrazilRaquel Oliveira PratesBrazilian Computer Society (SBC)
BulgariaKamelia StefanovaBulgarian Academy of Sciences
CanadaLu XiaoCanadian Information Processing Society
ChileJaime SánchezChilean Society of Computer Science
CroatiaAndrina GranicCroatian Information Technology
Association (CITA)
CyprusPanayiotis ZaphirisCyprus Computer Society
Czech RepublicZdeněk MíkovecCzech Society for Cybernetics
and Informatics
DenmarkTorkil ClemmensenDanish Federation for Information
Processing
FinlandVirpi RotoFinnish Information Processing
Association
FrancePhilippe PalanqueSociété informatique de France (SIF)
GermanyTom GrossGesellschaft für Informatik e.V.
HungaryCecilia Sik LanyiJohn V. Neumann Computer Society
IndiaAnirudha JoshiComputer Society of India (CSI)
IrelandLiam J. BannonIrish Computer Society
ItalyFabio PaternòItalian Computer Society
JapanYoshifumi KitamuraInformation Processing Society of Japan
KoreaGerry KimKIISE
The NetherlandsVanessa EversNederlands Genootschap voor
Informatica
New ZealandMark ApperleyNew Zealand Computer Society
NigeriaChris C. NwannennaNigeria Computer Society
NorwayDag SvanesNorwegian Computer Society
PolandMarcin SikorskiPoland Academy of Sciences
PortugalPedro CamposAssociacão Portuguesa para o Desen-volvimento da Sociedade da Informação
(APDSI)
SingaporeShengdong ZhaoSingapore Computer Society
SlovakiaWanda BenešováThe Slovak Society for Computer
Science
SloveniaMatjaž DebevcThe Slovenian Computer Society
INFORMATIKA
South AfricaJanet L. WessonThe Computer Society of South Africa
SpainJulio AbascalAsociación de Técnicos de Informática
(ATI)
XIV IFIP TC13 Members
SwedenJan GulliksenSwedish Interdisciplinary Society
for Human–Computer InteractionSwedish Computer Society
SwitzerlandDenis LalanneSwiss Federation for Information
Processing
TunisiaMona LaroussiEcole Supérieure des Communications
De Tunis (SUP’COM)
UKJosé Abdelnour NoceraBritish Computer Society (BCS)
United Arab EmiratesGhassan Al-QaimariUAE Computer Society
USAGerrit van der VeerAssociation for Computing Machinery
(ACM)
Expert Members
Dan Orwa University of Nairobi, KenyaDavid Lamas Tallinn University, EstoniaDorian Gorgan Technical University of Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaEunice Sari University of Western Australia, Australia and UX Indonesia,
IndonesiaFernando Loizides Cardiff University, UK and Cyprus University of Technology,
CyprusFrank Vetere University of Melbourne, AustraliaIvan Burmistrov Moscow State University, RussiaJoaquim Jorge INESC-ID, PortugalMarta Kristin
LarusdottirReykjavik University, Iceland
Nikolaos Avouris University of Patras, GreecePaula Kotze CSIR Meraka Institute, South AfricaPeter Forbrig University of Rostock, GermanySimone D.J. Barbosa PUC-Rio, BrazilVu Nguyen VietnamZhengjie Liu Dalian Maritime University, China
Observer
Masaaki Kurosu, Japan
Working Group Chairs
WG 13.1 (Education in HCIand HCI Curricula)
Konrad Baumann, Austria
WG 13.2 (Methodologiesfor User-Centered System Design)
Marco Winckler, France
IFIP TC13 Members XV
WG 13.3 (HCI and Disability)
Helen Petrie, UK
WG 13.4/2.7 (User InterfaceEngineering)
José Creissac Campos, Portugal
WG 13.5 (Resilience, Reliability,Safety, and Human Error in SystemDevelopment)
Chris Johnson, UK
WG 13.6 (Human-Work InteractionDesign)
Pedro Campos, Portugal
WG 13.7 (HCI and Visualization)
Peter Dannenmann, Germany
WG 13.8 (Interaction Designand International Development)
José Adbelnour Nocera, UK
WG 13.9 (Interaction Designand Children)
Janet Read, UK
WG 13.10 (Human-CenteredTechnology for Sustainability)
Masood Masoodian, Finland
XVI IFIP TC13 Members
Conference Organizing Committee
General Conference Chairs
Anirudha Joshi, IndiaGirish Dalvi, India
Technical Program Chair
Marco Winckler, France
Full-Paper Chairs
Regina Bernhaupt, FranceJacki O’Neill, India
Short-Paper Chairs
Peter Forbrig, GermanySriganesh Madhvanath, USA
Case Studies Chairs
Ravi Poovaiah, IndiaElizabeth Churchill, USA
Courses Chairs
Gerrit van der Veer, The NetherlandsDhaval Vyas, Australia
Demonstrations Chairs
Takahiro Miura, JapanShengdong Zhao, SingaporeManjiri Joshi, India
Doctoral Consortium Chairs
Paula Kotze, South AfricaPedro Campos, Portugal
Field Trips Chairs
Nimmi Rangaswamy, IndiaJosé Abdelnour Nocera, UKDebjani Roy, India
Industry Presentations Chairs
Suresh Chande, FinlandFernando Loizides, UK
Installations Chairs
Ishneet Grover, IndiaJayesh Pillai, IndiaNagraj Emmadi, India
Keynotes and Invited Talks Chair
Philippe Palanque, France
Panels Chairs
Antonella De Angeli, ItalyRosa Arriaga, USA
Posters Chairs
Girish Prabhu, IndiaZhengjie Liu, China
Student Research Consortium Chairs
Indrani Medhi, IndiaNaveen Bagalkot, IndiaJanet Wesson, South Africa
Student Design Consortium Chairs
Abhishek Shrivastava, IndiaPrashant Sachan, IndiaArnab Chakravarty, India
Workshops Chairs
Torkil Clemmensen, DenmarkVenkatesh Rajamanickam, India
Accessibility Chairs
Prachi Sakhardande, IndiaSonali Joshi, India
Childcare Club Chairs
Atish Patel, IndiaSusmita Sharma, India
Food and Social Events Chair
Rucha Tulaskar, India
Local Organizing Chairs
Manjiri Joshi, IndiaNagraj Emmadi, India
Proceedings Chairs
Marco Winckler, FranceDevanuj Balkrishan, India
Sponsorship Chair
Atul Manohar, India
Student Volunteers Chairs
Rasagy Sharma, IndiaJayati Bandyopadhyay, India
Venue Arrangements Chair
Sugandh Malhotra, India
Web and Social Media Chair
Naveed Ahmed, India
Program Committee
Associated Chairs
Simone Barbosa, BrazilNicola Bidwell, NamibiaPernille Bjorn, DenmarkBirgit Bomsdorf, GermanyTorkil Clemmensen, DenmarkJosé Creissac Campos, PortugalPeter Forbrig, GermanyTom Gross, GermanyJan Gulliksen, SwedenNathalie Henry Riche, USAAbhijit Karnik, UKDave Kirk, UKDenis Lalanne, SwitzerlandAiri Lampinen, SwedenEffie Law, UKEric Lecolinet, FranceZhengjie Liu, ChinaFernando Loizides, UKCélia Martinie, FranceLaurence Nigay, France
Monique Noirhomme, BelgiumPhilippe Palanque, FranceFabio Paterno, ItalyHelen Petrie, UKAntonio Piccinno, ItalyKari-Jouko Raiha, FinlandDave Randall, GermanyNimmi Rangaswamy, IndiaJohn Rooksby, UKVirpi Roto, FinlandJan Stage, DenmarkFrank Steinicke, GermanySimone Stumpf, UKGerrit van der Veer, The NetherlandsDhaval Vyas, IndiaGerhard Weber, GermanyJanet Wesson, South AfricaMarco Winckler, FrancePanayiotis Zaphiris, Cyprus
XVIII Conference Organizing Committee
Reviewers
Julio Abascal, SpainJosé Abdelnour Nocera, UKSilvia Abrahão, SpainAbiodun Afolayan Ogunyemi, EstoniaAna Paula Afonso, PortugalDavid Ahlström, AustriaMuneeb Ahmad, AustraliaDeepak Akkil, FinlandSarah Alaoui, FranceKomathi Ale, SingaporeJan Alexandersson, GermanyDzmitry Aliakseyeu, The NetherlandsHend S. Al-Khalifa, Saudi ArabiaFereshteh Amini, CanadaJunia Anacleto, BrazilMads Schaarup Andersen, DenmarkLeonardo Angelini, SwitzerlandHuckauf Anke, GermanyCraig Anslow, New ZealandNathalie Aquino, ParaguayOscar Javier Ariza Núñez, GermanyParvin Asadzadeh, UKUday Athavankar, IndiaDavid Auber, FranceNikolaos Avouris, GreeceSohaib Ayub, PakistanChris Baber, UKCedric Bach, FranceNaveen Bagalkot, IndiaJan Balata, Czech RepublicEmilia Barakova, The NetherlandsPippin Barr, DenmarkOswald Barral, FinlandBarbara Rita Barricelli, ItalyMichel Beaudouin-Lafon, FranceAstrid Beck, GermanyJordan Beck, USARoman Bednarik, FinlandBen Bedwell, UKMarios Belk, GermanyYacine Bellik, FranceDavid Benyon, UKFrançois Bérard, France
Arne Berger, GermanyNigel Bevan, UKAnastasia Bezerianos, FranceSudhir Bhatia, IndiaDorrit Billman, USAPradipta Biswas, IndiaEdwin Blake, South AfricaRenaud Blanch, FranceMads Bødker, DenmarkCristian Bogdan, SwedenRodrigo Bonacin, BrazilClaus Bossen, DenmarkPaolo Bottoni, ItalyNadia Boukhelifa, FranceNina Boulus-Rødje, DenmarkJudy Bowen, New ZealandMargot Brereton, AustraliaRoberto Bresin, SwedenBarry Brown, SwedenEmeline Brulé, FranceNick Bryan-Kinns, UKSabin-Corneliu Buraga, RomaniaIneke Buskens, South AfricaAdrian Bussone, UKMaria Claudia Buzzi, ItalyMarina Buzzi, ItalyFederico Cabitza, ItalyDiogo Cabral, PortugalÅsa Cajander, SwedenEduardo Calvillo Gamez, MexicoErik Cambria, SingaporePedro Campos, PortugalTara Capel, AustraliaCinzia Cappiello, ItalyStefan Carmien, SpainMaria Beatriz Carmo, PortugalLuis Carriço, PortugalStefano Carrino, SwitzerlandGéry Casiez, FranceFabio Cassano, ItalyThais Castro, BrazilVanessa Cesário, PortugalArnab Chakravarty, India
Conference Organizing Committee XIX
Matthew Chalmers, UKTeresa Chambel, PortugalChunlei Chang, AustraliaOlivier Chapuis, FranceWeiqin Chen, NorwayMauro Cherubini, SwitzerlandFanny Chevalier, FranceYoram Chisik, PortugalEun Kyoung Choe, USAMabrouka Chouchane, TunisiaElizabeth Churchill, USAGilbert Cockton, UKAshley Colley, FinlandChristopher Collins, CanadaTayana Conte, BrazilNuno Correia, PortugalJoelle Coutaz, FranceRui Couto, PortugalCéline Coutrix, FranceNadine Couture, FranceLynne Coventry, UKBenjamin Cowan, IrelandPaul Curzon, UKEdward Cutrell, IndiaFlorian Daiber, GermanyNick Dalton, UKGirish Dalvi, IndiaJose Danado, USAChi Tai Dang, GermanyTicianne Darin, BrazilJenny Darzentas, GreeceGiorgio De Michelis, ItalyClarisse de Souza, BrazilRalf de Wolf, BelgiumAndy Dearden, UKDmitry Dereshev, UKGiuseppe Desolda, ItalyHeather Desurvire, USAAmira Dhouib, TunisiaInes Di Loreto, ItalyPaulo Dias, PortugalShalaka Dighe, IndiaTawanna Dillahunt, USAAnke Dittmar, GermanyAndre Doucette, CanadaPierre Dragicevic, France
Steven Drucker, USACarlos Duarte, PortugalJulie Ducasse, FranceAndreas Duenser, AustraliaBruno Dumas, BelgiumPaul Dunphy, UKSophie Dupuy-Chessa, FranceSourav Dutta, IndiaJames Eagan, FranceGrace Eden, SwitzerlandBrian Ekdale, USALinda Elliott, USAChris Elsden, UKMorten Esbensen, DenmarkFlorian Evéquoz, SwitzerlandShamal Faily, UKCarla Faria Leitao, BrazilAva Fatah gen. Schieck, UKCamille Fayollas, FranceTom Feltwell, UKXavier Ferre, SpainPedro Ferreira, DenmarkSebastian Feuerstack, BrazilPatrick Tobias Fischer, GermanyGeraldine Fitzpatrick, AustriaRowanne Fleck, UKDaniela Fogli, ItalyAsbjørn Følstad, NorwayManuel J. Fonseca, PortugalRenata Fortes, BrazilAndré Freire, UKParseihian Gaëtan, FranceRadhika Gajalla, USATeresa Galvão, PortugalNestor Garay-Vitoria, SpainRoberto García, SpainJose Luis Garrido, SpainFranca Garzotto, ItalyIsabela Gasparini, BrazilCally Gatehouse, UKSven Gehring, GermanyStuart Geiger, USAHelene Gelderblom, South AfricaCristina Gena, IrelandCristina Gena, ItalyVivian Genaro Motti, USA
XX Conference Organizing Committee
Rosella Gennari, ItalyWerner Geyer, USAGiuseppe Ghiani, ItalyAnirban Ghosh, CanadaSanjay Ghosh, IndiaMartin Gibbs, AustraliaPatrick Girard, FranceVictor Gonzalez, MexicoRohini Gosain, IrelandNicholas Graham, CanadaTiago Guerreiro, PortugalYves Guiard, FranceNuno Guimaraes, PortugalTauseef Gulrez, AustraliaThilina Halloluwa, Sri LankaMartin Halvey, UKDave Harley, UKRichard Harper, UKMichael Harrison, UKHeidi Hartikainen, FinlandThomas Hartley, UKMariam Hassib, GermanyAri Hautasaari, JapanElaine Hayashi, BrazilJonas Hedman, DenmarkRuediger Heimgaertner, GermanyTomi Heimonen, USAMattias Heinrich, GermanyIngi Helgason, UKWilko Heuten, GermanyUta Hinrichs, UKDaniel Holliday, UKJonathan Hook, UKJettie Hoonhout, The NetherlandsHeiko Hornung, BrazilAxel Hösl, GermanyLara Houston, UKRoberto Hoyle, USAWilliam Hudson, UKStéphane Huot, FranceChristophe Hurter, FranceHusniza Husni, MalaysiaEbba Thora Hvannberg, IcelandAulikki Hyrskykari, FinlandYavuz Inal, TurkeyPetra Isenberg, France
Poika Isokoski, FinlandMinna Isomursu, DenmarkHowell Istance, FinlandKai-Mikael Jää-Aro, SwedenKarim Jabbar, DenmarkIsa Jahnke, USAAbhishek Jain, IndiaMlynar Jakub, SwitzerlandYvonne Jansen, FranceCamille Jeunet, FranceNan Jiang, UKRadu Jianu, UKDeepak John Mathew, IndiaMatt Jones, UKRui José, PortugalAnirudha Joshi, IndiaDhaval Joshi, ChinaManjiri Joshi, IndiaMike Just, UKEija Kaasinen, FinlandHernisa Kacorri, USASanjay Kairam, USABridget Kane, IrelandShaun K. Kane, USAJari Kangas, FinlandAnn Marie Kanstrup, DenmarkEvangelos Karapanos, CyprusTurkka Keinonen, FinlandPramod Khambete, IndiaMunwar Khan, IndiaNamWook Kim, USAYea-Seul Kim, USAJennifer King, USAReuben Kirkham, UKKathi Kitner, South AfricaSøren Knudsen, DenmarkJanin Koch, FinlandLisa Koeman, The NetherlandsUttam Kokil, USAChristophe Kolski, FrancePaula Kotze, South AfricaDennis Krupke, GermanySari Kujala, FinlandDavid Lamas, EstoniaEike Langbehn, GermanyRosa Lanzilotti, Italy
Conference Organizing Committee XXI
Marta Larusdottir, IcelandYann Laurillau, FranceElise Lavoué, FranceBongshin Lee, USAMatthew Lee, USABarbara Leporini, ItalyAgnes Lisowska Masson, SwitzerlandNetta Livari, FinlandKiel Long, UKVíctor López-Jaquero, SpainYichen Lu, FinlandStephanie Ludi, USABernd Ludwig, GermanyChristopher Lueg, AustraliaEwa Luger, UKStephan Lukosch, The NetherlandsJo Lumsden, UKChristof Lutteroth, UKKris Luyten, BelgiumMiroslav Macik, Czech RepublicScott Mackenzie, CanadaAllan MacLean, UKChristian Maertin, GermanyCharlotte Magnusson, SwedenJyotirmaya Mahapatra, IndiaRanjan Maity, IndiaPäivi Majaranta, FinlandSylvain Malacria, FranceMarco Manca, ItalyKathia Marçal de Oliveira, FrancePanos Markopolous, The NetherlandsPaolo Masci, PortugalDimitri Masson, FranceStina Matthiesen, DenmarkClaire McCallum, UKRoisin McNaney, UKIndrani Medhi-Thies, IndiaGerrit Meixner, GermanyJohanna Meurer, GermanyLuana Micallef, FinlandTakahiro Miura, JapanJudith Molka-Danielsen, NorwayNaja Holten Moller, DenmarkGiulio Mori, ItalyAlistair Morrison, UKAske Mottelson, Denmark
Omar Mubin, AustraliaMichael Muller, USALennart Nacke, CanadaAmit Nanavati, IndiaDavid Navarre, FranceCarla Nave, PortugalLuciana Nedel, BrazilMatti Nelimarkka, FinlandJulien Nembrini, SwitzerlandDavid Nemer, USAVania Neris, BrazilMaish Nichani, SingaporeJames Nicholson, UKDiederick C. Niehorster, SwedenShuo Niu, USAManuel Noguera, SpainNicole Novielli, ItalyDiana Nowacka, UKMarcus Nyström, SwedenMarianna Obrist, UKLars Oestreicher, SwedenThomas Olsson, FinlandJuliet Ongwae, UKDympna O’Sullivan, UKAntti Oulasvirta, FinlandSaila Ovaska, FinlandXinru Page, USAAna Paiva, PortugalSabrina Panëels, FranceSmitha Papolu, USAHugo Paredes, PortugalSusan Park, CanadaOscar Pastor, SpainJennifer Pearson, UKSimon Perrault, SingaporeMark Perry, UKAnicia Peters, NamibiaKevin Pfeil, USAJayesh Pillai, IndiaMarcelo Pimenta, BrazilAparecido Fabiano Pinatti de Carvalho,
GermanyClaudio Pinhanez, BrazilStefania Pizza, ItalyBernd Ploderer, AustraliaAndreas Poller, Germany
XXII Conference Organizing Committee
Ravi Poovaiah, IndiaChristopher Power, UKGirish Prabhu, IndiaDenise Prescher, GermanyCostin Pribeanu, RomaniaHelen Purchase, UKXiangang Qin, DenmarkVenkatesh Rajamanickam, IndiaDorina Rajanen, FinlandRani Gadhe Rani Gadhe, IndiaHeli Rantavuo, SwedenNoopur Raval, USAJanet Read, UKSreedhar Reddy, IndiaChristian Remy, SwitzerlandKaren Renaud, UKAntónio Nestor Ribeiro, PortugalMichael Rietzler, GermanyMaurizio Rigamonti, SwitzerlandKerem Rızvanoğlu, TurkeyTeresa Romao, PortugalMaki Rooksby, UKMark Rouncefield, UKGustavo Rovelo, BelgiumDebjani Roy, IndiaHamed R-Tavakolli, FinlandSimon Ruffieux, SwitzerlandAngel Ruiz-Zafra, UKKatri Salminen, FinlandAntti Salovaara, FinlandFrode Eika Sandnes, NorwaySupraja Sankaran, BelgiumVagner Santana, BrazilCarmen Santoro, ItalyVidya Sarangapani, UKSayan Sarcar, JapanSomwrita Sarkar, AustraliaChristine Satchell, AustraliaMithileysh Sathiyanarayanan, UKAnthony Savidis, GreeceSusanne Schmidt, GermanyKevin Schneider, CanadaDirk Schnelle-Walka, GermanyRonald Schroeter, AustraliaVinícius Segura, BrazilAjanta Sen, India
Audrey Serna, FranceMarcos Serrano, FranceLeslie Setlock, USAAnshuman Sharma, IndiaPatrick C. Shih, USAShanu Shukla, IndiaGulati Siddharth, EstoniaBruno Silva, BrazilCarlos C.L. Silva, PortugalMilene Silveira, BrazilAdalberto Simeone, UKJaana Simola, FinlandCarla Simone, FinlandLaurianne Sitbon, AustraliaAshok Sivaji, MalaysiaKeyur Sorathia, IndiaAlessandro Soro, AustraliaOleg Spakov, FinlandLucio Davide Spano, ItalySusan Squires, USAChristian Stary, AustriaKatarzyna Stawarz, UKJürgen Steimle, GermanyRevi Sterling, USAAgnis Stibe, USAMarkus Stolze, SwitzerlandSelina Sutton, UKDavid Swallow, UKAurélien Tabard, FranceMarcel Taeumel, GermanyChee-Wee Tan, DenmarkJennyfer Taylor, AustraliaRobyn Taylor, UKRobert Teather, CanadaLuis Teixeira, PortugalPaolo Tell, DenmarkJakob Tholander, SwedenAlice Thudt, CanadaSubrata Tikadar, IndiaMartin Tomitsch, AustraliaIlaria Torre, ItalyNoam Tractinsky, IsraelHallvard Traetteberg, NorwayGiovanni Troiano, USAJanice Tsai, USARobert Tscharn, Germany
Conference Organizing Committee XXIII
Manfred Tscheligi, AustriaTruna Turner, AustraliaMarkku Turunen, FinlandPankaj Upadhyay, IndiaHeli Väätäjä, FinlandPedro Valderas, SpainStefano Valtolina, ItalyJan van den Bergh, BelgiumThea van der Geest, The NetherlandsDavy Vanacken, BelgiumJean Vanderdonckt, BelgiumChristina Vasiliou, CyprusRadu-Daniel Vatavu, RomaniaShriram Venkatraman, IndiaNervo Xavier Verdezoto, UKHimanshu Verma, SwitzerlandArnold P.O.S. Vermeeren,
The NetherlandsJo Vermeulen, BelgiumChi Thanh Vi, UKNadine Vigouroux, FranceJean-Luc Vinot, FranceDong Bach Vo, UKLin Wan, Germany
Xiying Wang, USAYi Wang, USAIngolf Waßmann, GermanyJenny Waycott, AustraliaGerald Weber, New ZealandKurtis Weir, UKBenjamin Weyers, GermanyJerome White, USAGraham Wilson, UKHeike Winshiers-Theophilus, NamibiaWolfgang Woerndl, GermanyKatrin Wolf, GermanyAndrea Wong, USANelson Wong, CanadaGavin Wood, UKAdam Worrallo, UKVolker Wulf, GermanyNaomi Yamashita, JapanPradeep Yammiyavar, IndiaTariq Zaman, MalaysiaMassimo Zancanaro, ItalyJuergen Ziegler, GermanyGottfried Zimmermann, Germany
XXIV Conference Organizing Committee
Sponsors and Partners
Silver Sponsors
Gala Dinner Sponsor
Design Competition Sponsor
Pitney Bowes
Education Partners
Interaction Design Foundation (IDF)
Friends of INTERACT
Ruwido GmBH, Austria Oxford University Press Converge by CauseCodeTechnologies
Sponsors and Partners XXV
Exhibitors
Partners
International Federation for Information Processing
In-cooperation with ACM In-cooperation with SIGCHI
Industrial Design Centre, IIT Bombay HCI Professionals’ Association of India
Computer Society of India IIT Bombay
XXVI Sponsors and Partners
Contents
Digital Inclusion
Contextualizing ICT Based Vocational Education for Rural Communities:Addressing Ethnographic Issues and Assessing Design Principles . . . . . . . . . 3
K.P. Sachith, Aiswarya Gopal, Alexander Muir, and Rao R. Bhavani
Enhancing Access to eLearning for People with Intellectual Disability:Integrating Usability with Learning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Theja Kuruppu Arachchi, Laurianne Sitbon, and Jinglan Zhang
Identifying Support Opportunities for Foreign Students: DisentanglingLanguage and Non-language Problems Among a Unique Population . . . . . . . 33
Jack Jamieson, Naomi Yamashita, and Jeffrey Boase
PersonaBrowser: Status Quo and Lessons Learnedfrom a Persona-Based Presentation Metaphor of WCAG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Alexander Henka and Gottfried Zimmermann
Women in Crisis Situations: Empowering and Supporting WomenThrough ICTs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
Tara Capel, Dhaval Vyas, and Margot Brereton
Games
Effects of Image-Based Rendering and Reconstruction on GameDevelopers Efficiency, Game Performance, and Gaming Experience . . . . . . . 87
George E. Raptis, Christina Katsini, Christos Fidas,and Nikolaos Avouris
Exploring in-the-Wild Game-Based Gesture Data Collection. . . . . . . . . . . . . 97Kiyoshi Oka, Weiquan Lu, Kasım Özacar, Kazuki Takashima,and Yoshifumi Kitamura
From Objective to Subjective Difficulty Evaluation in Video Games . . . . . . . 107Thomas Constant, Guillaume Levieux, Axel Buendia,and Stéphane Natkin
Improved Memory Elicitation in Virtual Reality: New ExperimentalResults and Insights. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
Joel Harman, Ross Brown, and Daniel Johnson
Practice in Reality for Virtual Reality Games: Making Players Familiarand Confident with a Game . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
Jeffrey C.F. Ho
Human Perception, Cognition and Behaviour
I Smell Creativity: Exploring the Effects of Olfactory and AuditoryCues to Support Creative Writing Tasks. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165
Frederica Gonçalves, Diogo Cabral, Pedro Campos,and Johannes Schöning
Night Mode, Dark Thoughts: Background Color Influencesthe Perceived Sentiment of Chat Messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184
Diana Löffler, Lennart Giron, and Jörn Hurtienne
Subjective Usability, Mental Workload Assessmentsand Their Impact on Objective Human Performance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202
Luca Longo
What is User’s Perception of Naturalness? An Explorationof Natural User Experience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224
Sanjay Ghosh, Chivukula Sai Shruthi, Himanshu Bansal,and Arvind Sethia
Information on Demand, on the Move, and Gesture Interaction
Presenting Information on the Driver’s Demand on a Head-Up Display . . . . . 245Renate Haeuslschmid, Christopher Klaus, and Andreas Butz
Seeing Through the Eyes of Heavy Vehicle Operators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263Markus Wallmyr
TrackLine: Refining touch-to-track Interaction for Camera MotionControl on Mobile Devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 283
Axel Hoesl, Sarah Aragon Bartsch, and Andreas Butz
Understanding Gesture Articulations Variability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 293Orlando Erazo, Yosra Rekik, Laurent Grisoni, and José A. Pino
Watching Your Back While Riding Your Bike: Designing for PreventiveSelf-care During Motorbike Commuting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 315
Tomas Sokoler and Naveen L. Bagalkot
XXVIII Contents
Interaction at the Workplace
FeetForward: On Blending New Classroom Technologies into SecondarySchool Teachers’ Routines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327
Pengcheng An, Saskia Bakker, and Berry Eggen
Human-Building Interaction: When the Machine Becomes a Building . . . . . . 348Julien Nembrini and Denis Lalanne
Investigating Wearable Technology for Fatigue Identificationin the Workplace. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 370
Christopher Griffiths, Judy Bowen, and Annika Hinze
Leveraging Conversational Systems to Assists New HiresDuring Onboarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 381
Praveen Chandar, Yasaman Khazaeni, Matthew Davis, Michael Muller,Marco Crasso, Q. Vera Liao, N. Sadat Shami, and Werner Geyer
RemindMe: Plugging a Reminder Manager into Emailfor Enhancing Workplace Responsiveness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 392
Casey Dugan, Aabhas Sharma, Michael Muller, Di Lu,Michael Brenndoerfer, and Werner Geyer
The Cost of Improved Overview: An Analysis of the Use of ElectronicWhiteboards in Emergency Departments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 402
Morten Hertzum
Interaction with Children
An Interactive Elementary Tutoring System for Oral Health EducationUsing an Augmented Approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 413
Mitali Sinha and Suman Deb
Empowered and Informed: Participation of Children in HCI . . . . . . . . . . . . . 431Janet C. Read, Matthew Horton, Daniel Fitton, and Gavin Sim
Gaze Awareness in Agent-Based Early-Childhood Learning Application . . . . 447Deepak Akkil, Prasenjit Dey, Deepshika Salian, and Nitendra Rajput
Puffy: A Mobile Inflatable Interactive Companion for Childrenwith Neurodevelopmental Disorder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 467
Franca Garzotto, Mirko Gelsomini, and Yosuke Kinoe
Author Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 493
Contents XXIX