HOW IS YOUR USER FEELING? INFERRING EMOTION THROUGH HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION DEVICES

被引:2
作者
Hibbeln, Martin [1 ]
Jenkins, Jeffrey L. [2 ]
Schneider, Christoph [3 ]
Valacich, Joseph S. [4 ]
Weinmann, Markus [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Duisburg Essen, Mercator Sch Management, Lotharstr 65, D-47057 Duisburg, Germany
[2] Brigham Young Univ, Dept Informat Syst, 790 TNRB, Provo, UT 84602 USA
[3] City Univ Hong Kong, Dept Informat Syst, Tat Chee Ave, Kowloon, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
[4] Univ Arizona, Management Informat Syst, McClelland Hall Room 430CC, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
[5] Univ Liechtenstein, Dept Informat Syst, Furst Franz Josef Str, FL-9490 Vaduz, Liechtenstein
关键词
Negative emotion; attentional control theory (ACT); mouse cursor distance; mouse cursor speed; mouse tracking; human-computer interaction; INFORMATION-TECHNOLOGY; MOBILE COMMERCE; FORCE CONTROL; DESIGN; MODEL; WEB; ACCEPTANCE; PERFORMANCE; FRUSTRATION; INTERFACES;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
TP [自动化技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
Emotion can influence important user behaviors, including purchasing decisions, technology use, and customer loyalty. The ability to easily assess users' emotion during live system use therefore has practical significance for the design and improvement of information systems. In this paper, we discuss using human-computer interaction input devices to infer emotion. Specifically, we utilize attentional control theory to explain how movement captured via a computer mouse (i.e., mouse cursor movements) can be a real-time indicator of negative emotion. We report three studies. In Study 1, an experiment with 65 participants from Amazon's Mechanical Turk, we randomly manipulated negative emotion and then monitored participants' mouse cursor movements as they completed a number-ordering task. We found that negative emotion increases the distance and reduces the speed of mouse cursor movements during the task. In Study 2, an experiment with 126 participants from a U.S. university, we randomly manipulated negative emotion and then monitored participants' mouse cursor movements while they interacted with a mock e-commerce site. We found that mouse cursor distance and speed can be used to infer the presence of negative emotion with an overall accuracy rate of 81.7 percent. In Study 3, an observational study with 80 participants from universities in Germany and Hong Kong, we monitored mouse cursor movements while participants interacted with an online product configurator. Participants reported their level of emotion after each step in the configuration process. We found that mouse cursor distance and speed can be used to infer the level of negative emotion with an out-of-sample R-2 of 0.17. The results enable researchers to assess negative emotional reactions during live system use, examine emotional reactions with more temporal precision, conduct multimethod emotion research, and create more unobtrusive affective and adaptive systems.
引用
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页码:1 / +
页数:28
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