Resource type
Date created
2009-10-13
Authors/Contributors
Abstract
One of the claimed benefits of embodied interaction is that it is an intuitive form of human–computer interaction. While this claim seems to be widely accepted, few studies explore the underlying cognitive mechanisms of intuition in the context of tangible and embedded interaction design. What is intuitive interaction? What makes an interface intuitive to use? We explore these questions in the context of a responsive auditory environment. We propose that intuitive interaction can be facilitated by instantiating an embodied metaphor in the mapping layer between movement-based input actions and auditory system responses. We search for evidence of benefit through a comparative study of the same responsive auditory environment implemented with and without an embodied metaphor in the interactional mapping layer. Qualitative findings about the complexities and limitations of designing intuitive interaction are summarised and the implications for the design of embodied interaction discussed.
Document
Identifier
DOI: 10.1504/IJART.2009.028927
Publication details
Publication title
International Journal of Arts and Technology
Document title
Human-computer-intuition? Exploring the cognitive basis for intuition in embodied interaction},
Date
2009
Volume
2
Issue
3
First page
235
Last page
254
Publisher DOI
Published article URL
Copyright statement
Copyright is held by the publisher with many rights continuing to also be held by the author(s).
Scholarly level
Peer reviewed?
Yes
Member of collection