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20 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » cs.HC/0311006

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How Push-To-Talk Makes Talk Less Pushy
Allison Woodruff ; Paul M. Aoki ;
Date 7 Nov 2003
Journal Proc. ACM SIGGROUP Conf. on Supporting Group Work, Sanibel Island, FL, Nov. 2003, 170-179. ACM Press. DOI: 10.1145/958160.958187
Subject Human-Computer Interaction ACM-class: H.4.3; H.5.3 | cs.HC
AbstractThis paper presents an exploratory study of college-age students using two-way, push-to-talk cellular radios. We describe the observed and reported use of cellular radio by the participants. We discuss how the half-duplex, lightweight cellular radio communication was associated with reduced interactional commitment, which meant the cellular radios could be used for a wide range of conversation styles. One such style, intermittent conversation, is characterized by response delays. Intermittent conversation is surprising in an audio medium, since it is typically associated with textual media such as instant messaging. We present design implications of our findings.
Source arXiv, cs.HC/0311006
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