Publication | Open Access
My Phone and Me
248
Citations
27
References
2016
Year
Unknown Venue
Warning SystemMobile InteractionMobile CollaborationBehavior MonitoringProblematic Smartphone UseCommunicationAttentionPerceived DisruptionSocial SciencesPsychologyMobile InterruptibilityQuantified SelfResponse TimeUser ExperienceMobile ComputingMobile SensingInterpersonal CommunicationHuman-computer InteractionArts
Notifications are extremely beneficial to users, but they often demand their attention at inappropriate moments. In this paper we present an in-situ study of mobile interruptibility focusing on the effect of cognitive and physical factors on the response time and the disruption perceived from a notification. Through a mixed method of automated smartphone logging and experience sampling we collected 10372 in-the-wild notifications and 474 questionnaire responses on notification perception from 20 users. We found that the response time and the perceived disruption from a notification can be influenced by its presentation, alert type, sender-recipient relationship as well as the type, completion level and complexity of the task in which the user is engaged. We found that even a notification that contains important or useful content can cause disruption. Finally, we observe the substantial role of the psychological traits of the individuals on the response time and the disruption perceived from a notification.
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