Publication | Open Access
Eliciting Spoken Interruptions to Inform Proactive Speech Agent Design
16
Citations
45
References
2021
Year
Unknown Venue
Speech Agent DesignCommunicationInteraction ManagementSpeech RecognitionPhoneticsUrgent Interruption ContextsConversation AnalysisLanguage StudiesHealth SciencesDialogue ManagementHuman Agent InteractionLinguisticsProactive Agent InterruptionsSpoken InterruptionsSpeech CommunicationSpeech ProcessingHuman-computer InteractionSpeech PerceptionVoice TechnologySpeech InterfaceVoice Interaction
Current speech agent interactions are typically user-initiated, limiting the interactions they can deliver. Future functionality will require agents to be proactive, sometimes interrupting users. Little is known about how these spoken interruptions should be designed, especially in urgent interruption contexts. We look to inform design of proactive agent interruptions through investigating how people interrupt others engaged in complex tasks. We therefore developed a new technique to elicit human spoken interruptions of people engaged in other tasks. We found that people interrupted sooner when interruptions were urgent. Some participants used access rituals to forewarn interruptions, but most rarely used them. People balanced speed and accuracy in timing interruptions, often using cues from the task they interrupted. People also varied phrasing and delivery of interruptions to reflect urgency. We discuss how our findings can inform speech agent design and how our paradigm can help gain insight into human interruptions in new contexts.
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