2012
Stefanis, Vassilios; Plessas, Athanasios; Komninos, Andreas; Garofalakis, John
Patterns of Usage and Context in Interaction with Communication Support Applications in Mobile Devices Proceedings Article
In: Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Human-computer Interaction with Mobile Devices and Services, pp. 25–34, ACM, San Francisco, California, USA, 2012, ISBN: 978-1-4503-1105-2.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Ετικέτες: contact lists, context awareness, mobile pim
@inproceedings{Stefanis:2012:PUC:2371574.2371579,
title = {Patterns of Usage and Context in Interaction with Communication Support Applications in Mobile Devices},
author = { Vassilios Stefanis and Athanasios Plessas and Andreas Komninos and John Garofalakis},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2371574.2371579},
doi = {10.1145/2371574.2371579},
isbn = {978-1-4503-1105-2},
year = {2012},
date = {2012-09-01},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Human-computer Interaction with Mobile Devices and Services},
pages = {25--34},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {San Francisco, California, USA},
series = {MobileHCI '12},
abstract = {Contact lists are one of the most frequently used applications on mobile devices. Users are reluctant to delete or remove contacts from their repositories and as modern smartphones provide an unlimited contact list storage space, these become increasingly large, sometimes measuring several hundred entries. In this paper we present our findings from two experiments with user-subjective and quantitative data concerning the use of mobile contact lists. We examine the role that frequency and recency of usage plays in the determination of a contact's importance, with a view to aid the speed and efficacy of the information seeking and retrieval process during the use of the contact list application.},
keywords = {contact lists, context awareness, mobile pim},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Contact lists are one of the most frequently used applications on mobile devices. Users are reluctant to delete or remove contacts from their repositories and as modern smartphones provide an unlimited contact list storage space, these become increasingly large, sometimes measuring several hundred entries. In this paper we present our findings from two experiments with user-subjective and quantitative data concerning the use of mobile contact lists. We examine the role that frequency and recency of usage plays in the determination of a contact's importance, with a view to aid the speed and efficacy of the information seeking and retrieval process during the use of the contact list application.