I Really did That: Sense of Agency with Touchpad, Keyboard, and On-skin Interaction

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Documents

  • paper378

    Final published version, 4.07 MB, PDF document

Input on the skin is emerging as an interaction style. At CHI
2012, Coyle and colleagues identified an increase in the sense
of agency (SoA) as one benefit of skin input. However, their
study only compared skin input to button presses and has not,
to our knowledge, been replicated. Therefore, we had 24 participants
compare skin input to both button presses and touchpad
input, measuring SoA using the Libet Clock paradigm.
We replicate previous findings regarding increased SoA in
skin versus button input and also find that SoA for skin is significantly
increased compared to touchpad input. Interview
data addressing subjective experience further support these
findings. We discuss agency and the experiences associated
with skin input, as well as differences to input with non-skin
devices.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCHI '18 Proceedings of the 2018 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Number of pages8
PublisherAssociation for Computing Machinery
Publication date2018
Article number378
ISBN (Print)9781450356206
ISBN (Electronic)9781450356213
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018
EventACM CHI 2018 - Montreal, Canada
Duration: 21 Apr 201826 Apr 2018

Conference

ConferenceACM CHI 2018
LandCanada
ByMontreal
Periode21/04/201826/04/2018

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