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TOCHI
1998

The Integrality of Speech in Multimodal Interfaces

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The Integrality of Speech in Multimodal Interfaces
A framework of complementary behavior has been proposed which maintains that direct manipulation and speech interfaces have reciprocal strengths and weaknesses. This suggests that user interface performance and acceptance may increase by adopting a multimodal approach that combines speech and direct manipulation. This effort examined the hypothesis that the speed, accuracy, and acceptance of multimodal speech and direct manipulation interfaces will increase when the modalities match the perceptual structure of the input attributes. A software prototype that supported a typical biomedical data collection task was developed to test this hypothesis. A group of 20 clinical and veterinary pathologists evaluated the prototype in an experimental setting using repeated measures. The results of this experiment supported the hypothesis that the perceptual structure of an input task is an important consideration when designing a multimodal computer interface. Task completion time, the number of ...
Michael A. Grasso, David S. Ebert, Timothy W. Fini
Added 23 Dec 2010
Updated 23 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 1998
Where TOCHI
Authors Michael A. Grasso, David S. Ebert, Timothy W. Finin
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