Human Computer Interaction and Emerging Technologies: Adjunct Proceedings from the INTERACT 2019 Workshops

Human Computer Interaction and Emerging Technologies: Adjunct Proceedings from the INTERACT 2019 Workshops

Adjunct Proceedings Cardiff Gwasg Cardiff University Press is an Open Access University Prifysgol publisher of academic research. We are ADJUNCT Press Caerdydd committed to innovation and excellence for the benefit of both academia and the PROCEEDINGS wider external community. cardiffuniversitypress.org PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND ENGINEERING WORKSHOPS 2019 INTERACT The INTERACT Conferences are an This volume contains the Adjunct important platform for researchers and Proceedings to the 17th INTERACT practitioners in the field of human- Conference, and comprises a series of computer interaction (HCI) to showcase papers from the workshops. It follows the their work. They are organised biennially INTERACT Conference tradition of the by the International Federation for publication of adjunct proceedings by a Human Computer Information Processing Technical University Press which has a connection Committee on Human–Computer to the conference itself. This tradition has Interaction (IFIP TC13), a committee been established to enhance the outreach Interaction and of 30 member national societies and 9 and reputation of the University Press Working Groups. The 17th IFIP TC13 chosen. Emerging Technologies International Conference on Human- Computer Interaction (INTERACT 2019) For INTERACT 2019, both the took place during 2-6 September 2019 in Conference Program Chair, Dr Fernando Paphos, Cyprus. The conference was held Loizides, and the Adjunct Proceedings at the Coral Beach Hotel Resort, and was Chair of the conference, Dr Usashi Adjunct Proceedings co-sponsored by the Cyprus University Chatterjee, work at Cardiff University of Technology and Tallinn University, in which is the home of Cardiff University from the INTERACT 2019 cooperation with ACM and ACM SIGCHI. Press. With an emphasis on inclusiveness, these conferences work to lower the barriers that Workshops prevent people in developing countries from participating in conferences. As a multidisciplinary field, HCI requires interaction and discussion among diverse people with different interests and Edited by backgrounds. Fernando Loizides Marco Winckler Usashi Chatterjee Jose Abdelnour-Nocera Antigoni Parmaxi Human Computer Interaction and Emerging Technologies: Adjunct Proceedings from the INTERACT 2019 Workshops Edited by Fernando Loizides, Marco Winckler, Usashi Chatterjee, Jose Abdelnour-Nocera and Antigoni Parmaxi Published by Cardiff University Press Cardiff University PO Box 430 1st Floor, 30-36 Newport Road Cardiff CF24 0DE https://cardiffuniversitypress.org Text © The authors 2020 First published 2020 Cover design by Hugh Griffiths Cover image by Easy Conferences Ltd. Print and digital versions typeset by Siliconchips Services Ltd. ISBN (Paperback): 978-1-911653-09-7 ISBN (PDF): 978-1-911653-13-4 ISBN (EPUB): 978-1-911653-10-3 ISBN (Kindle): 978-1-911653-11-0 DOI: https://doi.org/10.18573/book3 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit creativecommons. org/licenses/by/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA. This license allows for copying any part of the work for personal and commercial use, providing author attribution is clearly stated. The full text of this book has been peer-reviewed to ensure high academic standards. For full review policies, see https://www.cardiffuniversitypress.org/ site/research-integrity/ Suggested citation: Loizides, F., Winckler, M., Chatterjee, U., Abdelnour-Nocera, J. and Parmaxi, A. (eds.) 2020. Human Computer Interaction and Emerging Technologies: Adjunct Proceedings from the INTERACT 2019 Workshops. Cardiff: Cardiff University Press. DOI: https:// doi.org/10.18573/book3. License: CC-BY 4.0 To read the free, open access version of this book online, visit https://doi.org/10.18573/book3 or scan this QR code with your mobile device: Contents Foreword vii 1 Designing for Aging People 1 1.1 A Storytelling-based Approach to Designing for the Needs of Ageing People – Elena Comincioli and Masood Masoodian 3 1.2 Breaking Interaction Barriers: Monitoring Elderly in Natural Settings Exploiting Everyday Objects – Marina Buzzi 13 1.3 A Value-sensitive Toolkit: Bringing Values into the Design Process when Designing for the Elderly – Mert Oktay and Hanna-Liisa Pender 23 1.4 The Sailboat Exercise as a Method for User Understanding and Requirements Gathering – Paula Alexandra Silva 31 2 Challenging Misinformation: Exploring Limits and Approaches 41 2.1 Misinformation and User-Generated content: Applying participatory journalism practices in fact-checking – Theodora Saridou, Theodora Maniou and Andreas Veglis 43 2.2 Navigating through real and fake news by using provenance information – Bianca Rodrigues Teixeira and Simone D.J. Barbosa 49 2.3 Disinformation online: potential legal and regulatory ramifications to the right to free elections – policy position paper – Krisztina Rozgonyi 57 2.4 Democratic Policy-making for Misinformation Detection Platforms by Git-based Principles – Oul Han, Ipek Baris, Akram Sadat Hosseini, Sarah de Nigris and Steffen Staab 67 2.5 DisMiss False Information: A Value Matter – Alisson Puska, Lara Piccolo and Roberto Pereira 75 3 Socially Acceptable HCI: Social Acceptability of Emerging Technologies and Novel Interaction Paradigms 81 3.1 On Social Acceptance of UI Intervention Mechanisms on Posting and Reading Comments on Online News – Joel Kiskola, Thomas Olsson, Heli aV¨at¨ aj¨ a,¨ Veikko Surakka and Mirja Ilves 83 iv Human Computer Interaction and Emerging Technologies 3.2 What Smartphones, Ethnomethodology, and Bystander Inaccessibility Can Teach Us About Better Design? – Eerik Mantere 91 3.3 A Scenario Generator for Evaluating the Social Acceptability of Emerging Technologies – Hannah Meyer, Marion Koelle and Susanne Boll 101 3.4 Social Acceptability, Obstructions, Collaboration and Embarrassment – Robb Mitchell 111 3.5 Is Going Unnoticed More Socially Acceptable?: An Exploration of the Relationship Between Social Acceptability and Noticeability of Fitness Trackers – Yumiko Sakamoto, Pourang Irani and Khalad Hasan 117 4 User Experiences and Wellbeing at Work 125 4.1 User Experience at Work: Four Perspectives on What It May Mean – Morten Hertzum 127 4.2 Prototype Design of Alert Device for Hearing Impaired Users – Priyank Kularia, Ganesh Bhutkar, Sumit Jadhav and Dhiraj Jadhav 133 4.3 The “aftermath” of Industry 4.0 in Small and Medium Enterprises – Joao˜ Carlos Ferreira and Joao˜ Silva 139 4.4 Experience Design for Work Tools – Virpi Roto 145 4.5 User Persona of Mother of Preterm Neonate – Ganesh Bhutkar, Aditya Dongre, Shahaji Deshmukh, Lene Nielsen and Jaydeep Joshi 151 4.6 Opportunities for recommended mental health strategies to reduce stress at work – Robin De Croon, Francisco Guti´errez and Katrien Verbert 157 4.7 Livability-Analysis of People’s Living Comfort in Different Cities of India Using GIS: A Prototype – Shrikant Salve, Shubham Bombarde, Ankit Agrawal, Smruti Paldiwal, Bishal Sharma Roy and Bhagyashree Alhat 163 4.8 Identification of Crop Disease using Augmented Reality-based Mobile App for Indian Farmers: A Prototype – Shrikant Salve 169 4.9 ‘Digital Peer-Tutoring’. Early results from a field evaluation of a ‘UX at work’ enhancing learning format – Torkil Clemmensen and Jacob Nørbjerg 175 4.10 Proposed System for a Socio-technical Design Framework for Improved User Collaborations with Automation Technologies – Parisa Saadati, Jos´e Abdelnour-Nocera and Torkil Clemmensen 181 Contents v 5 Human(s) in the Loop Bringing AI & HCI 189 5.1 Designing a Machine Learning-based System to Augment the Work Processes of Medical Secretaries – Patrick S. Johansen, Rune M. Jacobsen, Lukas B. L. Bysted, Mikael B. Skov and Eleftherios Papachristos 191 5.2 Interfacing AI with Social Sciences: the Call for a New Research Focus in HCI – Hamed S. Alavi and Denis Lalanne 197 5.3 Towards Diverse AI: Can an AI-Human Hybrid Council Prevent Future Apartheids? – Gabriel Diniz Junqueira Barbosa and Simone Diniz Junqueira Barbosa 203 5.4 Building a Trustworthy Explainable AI in Healthcare – Retno Larasati and Anna DeLiddo 209 5.5 A View from Outside the Loop – Anders Hedman 215 5.6 Nonverbal Communication in Human-AI Interaction: Opportunities and Challenges – Joshua Newn, Ronal Singh, Fraser Allison, Prashan Madumal, Eduardo Velloso and Frank Vetere 221 5.7 MARVIN: Identifying Design Requirements for an AI powered Conversational User Interface for Extraterrestrial Space Habitats – Youssef Nahas, Christiane Heinicke and Johannes Schoning¨ 227 5.8 You should not control what you do not understand: the risks of controllability in AI – Gabriel Diniz Junqueira Barbosa and Simone Diniz Junqueira Barbosa 231 5.9 Using AI to Improve Product Teams’ Customer Empathy – Valentina Grigoreanu, Monty Hammontree and Travis Lowdermilk 237 5.10 Supporting the Experience of Stakeholders of Multimedia Art Towards an Ontology – Danzhu Li and Gerrit C. van der Veer 243 6 Handling Security, Usability, User Experience and Reliability in User-Centered Development Processes 253 6.1 Characterizing Sets of Systems: Across-Systems Properties and their Representation – Elodie Bouzekri, Alexandre Canny, C`elia Martinie and Philippe Palanque 255 6.2 Aligning Security, Usability, User Experience: A Pattern Approach – Bilal Naqvi, Jari Porras, Shola Oyedeji and Mehar Ullah 267 6.3 Towards Intelligent User Interfaces to Prevent Phishing Attacks – Joseph Aneke, Carmelo Ardito and Giuseppe Desolda 279 vi Human Computer

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