Proceedings of the 2012 International Symposium on Pervasive Displays 2012
DOI: 10.1145/2307798.2307815
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How to evaluate public displays

Abstract: After years in the lab, interactive public displays are finding their way into public spaces, shop windows, and public institutions. They are equipped with a multitude of sensors as well as (multi-) touch surfaces allowing not only the audience to be sensed, but also their effectiveness to be measured. The lack of generally accepted design guidelines for public displays and the fact that there are many different objectives (e.g., increasing attention, optimizing interaction times, finding the best interaction … Show more

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Cited by 135 publications
(92 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…Inter-rater reliability was substantial (Cohen's Kappa = 0.75) [25]. We observed the aspects described by Alt et al [2] basing on a literature survey and their expertise on evaluating public displays installations. The aspects were audience behavior around the installation, effectiveness of the installation, social interaction among users, users' acceptance by engaging and inviting others, and people's concerns about their privacy.…”
Section: Understanding the Audience Behaviormentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Inter-rater reliability was substantial (Cohen's Kappa = 0.75) [25]. We observed the aspects described by Alt et al [2] basing on a literature survey and their expertise on evaluating public displays installations. The aspects were audience behavior around the installation, effectiveness of the installation, social interaction among users, users' acceptance by engaging and inviting others, and people's concerns about their privacy.…”
Section: Understanding the Audience Behaviormentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Similarly, Ojala et al [35,36] have reflected on their multi-year experience with the UBI-Hotspots and have described the challenges involved in continuously running and maintaining, as well as evaluating networked public displays in urban settings. The general procedures, methods, and tools used in the public display research has been described by Alt et al [4]. When it comes to networked public displays for communities, Memarovic et al [27] have analyzed previous research and have described general implications of having the input and output of networked public displays tethered to a display, or "free to roam" allowing remote posting and viewing of the display content.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…So far, direct questions to viewers, such as interviews or questionnaires, have been commonly used for evaluating the content of public display [4]. One major drawback in such direct questions is that much human labor is required for gathering and analyzing the sufficient data of evaluation.…”
Section: Classification Of Previous Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vogel et al [9] considered the viewers' behaviors from the aspect of their relative positions and the aspect of their voluntary behaviors of touching screen, for changing levels of detail of the content. Schiavo et al [10] proposed 4 The processing flow of the proposed method and example of recognizing viewers' involuntary behaviors including motion capture and movements (the line with the circle below means his moving direction). First, the system randomly creates a first generation of content designs based on the defined content by the sender.…”
Section: Utilization Of Viewers' Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 99%