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Contributions to Proceedings:

P. Krieger, M. Kattenbeck, B. Ludwig, J. Helmbrecht, I. Giannopoulos:
"Hey You! Letīs Talk. Dialogue-Initiatives Revisited for Wayfinding Instructions";
in: "Full paper Proceedings of the 23rd AGILE Conference on Geographic Information Science", issued by: AGILE; Copernicus GmbH, Göttingen, 2020, 19 pages.



English abstract:
This paper presents Human-Computer Interaction design guidelines for interactive wayfinding assistance systems which provide on-line route instructions. These design suggestions are based on a corpus of human-to-human, on-line, landmark-based route instructions in German language which were gathered by means of an in-situ study involving pairs of participants. Based on the description of this collection, which is made publicly available, an in-depth analysis of the corpus is presented: This analysis reveals the importance of establishing Common Ground through existential-presentative constructions which have, up until now, not been taken into account in presenting route instructions to users of pedestrian navigation systems. These syntactical constructs provide the empirical ground for two important design suggestions: Systems should, first, ask for explicit feedback whether a salient object is recognised by users before referring to this object in a route instruction. Second, a mode of negotiating Common Ground once it was lost should be implemented, which can be initiated by the user. The results reveal the importance of the state-tracking capabilities of wayfinding assistance systems.

German abstract:
This paper presents Human-Computer Interaction design guidelines for interactive wayfinding assistance systems which provide on-line route instructions. These design suggestions are based on a corpus of human-to-human, on-line, landmark-based route instructions in German language which were gathered by means of an in-situ study involving pairs of participants. Based on the description of this collection, which is made publicly available, an in-depth analysis of the corpus is presented: This analysis reveals the importance of establishing Common Ground through existential-presentative constructions which have, up until now, not been taken into account in presenting route instructions to users of pedestrian navigation systems. These syntactical constructs provide the empirical ground for two important design suggestions: Systems should, first, ask for explicit feedback whether a salient object is recognised by users before referring to this object in a route instruction. Second, a mode of negotiating Common Ground once it was lost should be implemented, which can be initiated by the user. The results reveal the importance of the state-tracking capabilities of wayfinding assistance systems.

Keywords:
Existential-presentative Constructions, Human Wayfinding, Corpus, Spoken Language, Route Instructions, Common Ground


"Official" electronic version of the publication (accessed through its Digital Object Identifier - DOI)
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/agile-giss-1-11-2020

Electronic version of the publication:
https://publik.tuwien.ac.at/files/publik_303304.pdf


Created from the Publication Database of the Vienna University of Technology.