Research using voice-based services as a technology platform for providing information access and services within developing world regions has shown much promise. The results for design and deployment of such voice-based services have varied depending on the application domain, user community and context. In this paper the authors describe their work on developing a voice-based service for obtaining feedback from school children, a previously unexplored user community. Through a user study, focus group discussions and observations of learners’ interaction with multiple design prototype versions, they investigated several factors around input modality preference, language preference, performance and overall user experience. Whilst no significant differences were observed for performance across the prototypes, there were strong preferences for speech (input modality) and English (language). Focus group discussions revealed rich information on learner’s perceptions around trust, confidentiality and general system usage. They highlight several design changes made and provide further recommendations on designing for this user community.
Reference:
Sharma Grover, AS, Calteaux, K, Barnard, E and Van Huyssteen, G. A voice service for user feedback on school meals. ACM DEV 2012, Atlanta, USA, 11-12 March 2012
Sharma Grover, A., Calteaux, K., Barnard, E., & Van Huyssteen, G. (2012). A voice service for user feedback on school meals. Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5897
Sharma Grover, AS, K Calteaux, E Barnard, and G Van Huyssteen. "A voice service for user feedback on school meals." (2012): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5897
Sharma Grover A, Calteaux K, Barnard E, Van Huyssteen G, A voice service for user feedback on school meals; Association for Computing Machinery (ACM); 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5897 .