2017
Portela, Manuel; Granell-Canut, Carlos
A new friend in our Smartphone? Observing Interactions with Chatbots in the search of emotional engagement Proceedings Article
In: Proceedings of 18th edition of the International Conference promoted by the Spanish Human Computer Interaction Association (Interaccion’17). Quintana roo, Mexico, 1-3 Sep 2017. , ACM, 2017, ISBN: 978-1-4503-5229-1.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: bots, GEO-C, RyC-Granell
@inproceedings{Portela2017b,
title = {A new friend in our Smartphone? Observing Interactions with Chatbots in the search of emotional engagement},
author = {Manuel Portela and Carlos Granell-Canut},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3123818.3123826},
isbn = {978-1-4503-5229-1},
year = {2017},
date = {2017-10-31},
booktitle = {Proceedings of 18th edition of the International Conference promoted by the Spanish Human Computer Interaction Association (Interaccion’17). Quintana roo, Mexico, 1-3 Sep 2017. },
publisher = {ACM},
abstract = {We present the findings of a quantitative and qualitative empirical research to understand the possibilities of engagement and affection in the use of conversational agents (chatbots). Based on an experiment with 13 participants, we explored on one hand the correlation between the user expectation, user experience and intended use and, on the other, whether users feel keen and engaged in having a personal, empathic relation with an intelligent system like chatbots. We used psychological questionnaires to semi-structured interviews for disentangle the meaning of the interaction. In particular, the personal psychological background of participants was found critical while the experience itself allowed them to imagine new possible relations with chatbots. Our results show some insights on how people understand and empathize with future interactions with conversational agents and other non-visual interfaces},
keywords = {bots, GEO-C, RyC-Granell},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
We present the findings of a quantitative and qualitative empirical research to understand the possibilities of engagement and affection in the use of conversational agents (chatbots). Based on an experiment with 13 participants, we explored on one hand the correlation between the user expectation, user experience and intended use and, on the other, whether users feel keen and engaged in having a personal, empathic relation with an intelligent system like chatbots. We used psychological questionnaires to semi-structured interviews for disentangle the meaning of the interaction. In particular, the personal psychological background of participants was found critical while the experience itself allowed them to imagine new possible relations with chatbots. Our results show some insights on how people understand and empathize with future interactions with conversational agents and other non-visual interfaces