Commanding and re-dictation: Developing eyes-free voice-based interaction for editing dictated text

Existing voice-based interfaces have limited support for text editing, especially when seeing the text is difficult, e.g., while walking or cooking. This research develops voice interaction techniques for eyes-free text editing. First, with a Wizard-of-Oz study, we identified two primary user strate...

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Main Authors: GHOSH, Debjyoti, LIU, Can, ZHAO, Shengdong, HARA, Kotaro
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2020
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/5889
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/6880/viewcontent/Ghosh_CommandingAndRe_dictationDevelopingEyes_freeVoice_basedInteractionForEditingDictatedText_TOCHI2020.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sis_research-68802021-05-24T01:11:08Z Commanding and re-dictation: Developing eyes-free voice-based interaction for editing dictated text GHOSH, Debjyoti LIU, Can ZHAO, Shengdong HARA, Kotaro Existing voice-based interfaces have limited support for text editing, especially when seeing the text is difficult, e.g., while walking or cooking. This research develops voice interaction techniques for eyes-free text editing. First, with a Wizard-of-Oz study, we identified two primary user strategies: using commands, e.g., “replace go with goes” and re-dictating over an erroneous portion, e.g., correcting “he go there” by saying “he goes there.” To support these user strategies with an actual system implementation, we developed two eyes-free voice interaction techniques, Commanding and Re-dictation, and evaluated them with a controlled experiment. Results showed that while Re-dictation performs significantly better for more semantically complex edits, Commanding is more suitable for making one-word edits, especially deletions. We developed VoiceRev to combine both the techniques in the same interface and evaluated it with realistic tasks. Results showed improved usability of the combined techniques over either of the two techniques used individually. 2020-08-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/5889 info:doi/10.1145/3390889 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/6880/viewcontent/Ghosh_CommandingAndRe_dictationDevelopingEyes_freeVoice_basedInteractionForEditingDictatedText_TOCHI2020.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Text editing Commanding Re-dictation Eyes-free Voice-based text editing Voice interaction Voice user interfaces Artificial Intelligence and Robotics Software Engineering
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Text editing
Commanding
Re-dictation
Eyes-free
Voice-based text editing
Voice interaction
Voice user interfaces
Artificial Intelligence and Robotics
Software Engineering
spellingShingle Text editing
Commanding
Re-dictation
Eyes-free
Voice-based text editing
Voice interaction
Voice user interfaces
Artificial Intelligence and Robotics
Software Engineering
GHOSH, Debjyoti
LIU, Can
ZHAO, Shengdong
HARA, Kotaro
Commanding and re-dictation: Developing eyes-free voice-based interaction for editing dictated text
description Existing voice-based interfaces have limited support for text editing, especially when seeing the text is difficult, e.g., while walking or cooking. This research develops voice interaction techniques for eyes-free text editing. First, with a Wizard-of-Oz study, we identified two primary user strategies: using commands, e.g., “replace go with goes” and re-dictating over an erroneous portion, e.g., correcting “he go there” by saying “he goes there.” To support these user strategies with an actual system implementation, we developed two eyes-free voice interaction techniques, Commanding and Re-dictation, and evaluated them with a controlled experiment. Results showed that while Re-dictation performs significantly better for more semantically complex edits, Commanding is more suitable for making one-word edits, especially deletions. We developed VoiceRev to combine both the techniques in the same interface and evaluated it with realistic tasks. Results showed improved usability of the combined techniques over either of the two techniques used individually.
format text
author GHOSH, Debjyoti
LIU, Can
ZHAO, Shengdong
HARA, Kotaro
author_facet GHOSH, Debjyoti
LIU, Can
ZHAO, Shengdong
HARA, Kotaro
author_sort GHOSH, Debjyoti
title Commanding and re-dictation: Developing eyes-free voice-based interaction for editing dictated text
title_short Commanding and re-dictation: Developing eyes-free voice-based interaction for editing dictated text
title_full Commanding and re-dictation: Developing eyes-free voice-based interaction for editing dictated text
title_fullStr Commanding and re-dictation: Developing eyes-free voice-based interaction for editing dictated text
title_full_unstemmed Commanding and re-dictation: Developing eyes-free voice-based interaction for editing dictated text
title_sort commanding and re-dictation: developing eyes-free voice-based interaction for editing dictated text
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2020
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/5889
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/6880/viewcontent/Ghosh_CommandingAndRe_dictationDevelopingEyes_freeVoice_basedInteractionForEditingDictatedText_TOCHI2020.pdf
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