Due2024c

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Due2024c
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Due2024c
Author(s) Brian L. Due, Louise Lüchow
Title VUI-Speak: There Is Nothing Conversational about “Conversational User Interfaces”
Editor(s) Florian Muhle, Indra Bock
Tag(s) EMCA, Conversational AI, Conversational User Interfaces, Google Home, Human–Computer Interaction
Publisher Bielefeld University Press
Year 2024
Language English
City Bielefeld
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 155–177
URL Link
DOI 10.1515/9783839475010-006
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Communicative AI in (Inter-)Action: Investigating Human-Machine Encounters outside the Laboratory
Chapter

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Abstract

In this chapter, we suggest a concept for describing participants’ practices regarding progressively adapting their actions to fit the computational system in voice user interfaces (VUIs) such as Google Home. We describe this phenomenon as “VUI-speak.” Although developers aim at enabling computers to communicate like humans, our study shows that, on the contrary, people accommodate the device through VUI-speak. Based on video ethnographic studies and ethnomethodological conversation analysis (EM/CA) of blind people’s natural use of Google Home, this research contributes to EM/CA studies of human–computer interaction, human–robot interaction, and VUIs in particular. The research findings suggest (1) that VUI-speak is produced at the third position in a five-part sequential structure, (2) that a change in action formation occurs, and (3) that this change relates to producing what we call an “application-oriented turn.” This research has practical implications for the design of conversational systems and contributes to the expanding field of EM/CA research on VUI interaction.

Notes