Publication | Closed Access
Assessing the Relationship between Technical Affinity, Stress and Notifications on Smartphones
55
Citations
9
References
2015
Year
Unknown Venue
Permission RequestsMobile SecurityEngineeringMobile InteractionPush NotificationsPersuasive TechnologySocial InfluenceProblematic Smartphone UseCommunicationMobile MarketingSocial MediaTechnical AffinityManagementNotification SettingsMobile Social NetworkBehavioral SciencesUser ExperienceMobile ComputingMobile SensingSocial ComputingHuman-computer InteractionTechnologyPersuasionMobile Health
Smartphones have become an indispensable part of everyday life. By this time, push notifications are at the core of many apps, proactively pushing new content to users. These notifications may raise awareness, but also have the downside of being disruptive. In this paper we present a laboratory study investigating users' attitudes towards notifications and how they deal with notification settings on their smartphones. Permission requests for sending push notifications on iOS don't inform the user about the nature of notifications of this app, leaving the user to make a rather uninformed choice on whether to accept or deny. We show that requests including explanations are significantly more likely to be accepted. Our results further indicate that apart from being disruptive, notifications may create stress due to information overload. Notification settings, once assigned a preset, are rarely changed, although not necessarily matching the favored one.
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