Publication | Closed Access
Large-scale assessment of mobile notifications
337
Citations
21
References
2014
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringMobile InteractionMobile NotificationsCommunicationText MiningMobile AnalyticsComputational Social ScienceSocial MediaData ScienceData MiningLanguage StudiesContent AnalysisSocial Medium MiningPredictive AnalyticsKnowledge DiscoveryUser FeedbackMobile ComputingComputer ScienceSubjective PerceptionsCore FeatureMobile SensingSocial ComputingHuman-computer Interaction
Notifications are a core feature of mobile phones. They inform users about a variety of events. Users may take immediate action or ignore them depending on the importance of a notification as well as their current context. The nature of notifications is manifold, applications use them both sparsely and frequently. In this paper we present the first large-scale analysis of mobile notifications with a focus on users' subjective perceptions. We derive a holistic picture of notifications on mobile phones by collecting close to 200 million notifications from more than 40,000 users. Using a data-driven approach, we break down what users like and dislike about notifications. Our results reveal differences in importance of notifications and how users value notifications from messaging apps as well as notifications that include information about people and events. Based on these results we derive a number of findings about the nature of notifications and guidelines to effectively use them.
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