Interaction in Motion: Designing Truly Mobile Interaction
Paper in proceeding, 2016

The use of technology while being mobile now takes place in many areas of people’s lives in a wide range of scenarios, for example users cycle, climb, run and even swim while interacting with devices. Conflict between locomotion and system use can reduce interaction performance and also the ability to safely move. We discuss the risks of such “interaction in motion”, which we argue make it desirable to design with locomotion in mind. To aid such design we present a taxonomy and framework based on two key dimensions: relation of interaction task to locomotion task, and the amount that a locomotion activity inhibits use of input and output interfaces. We accompany this with four strategies for interaction in motion. With this work, we ultimately aim to enhance our understanding of what being “mobile” actually means for interaction, and help practitioners design truly mobile interactions.

Author

Joe Marshall

University of Nottingham

Alexandru Dancu

Chalmers, Applied Information Technology (Chalmers), Interaction design

Florian Floyd Mueller

RMIT University

Proceedings of the 17th conference on Designing Interactive Systems, DIS '16

215-228
978-145034031-1 (ISBN)

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Subject Categories

Computer and Information Science

Human Computer Interaction

DOI

10.1145/2901790.2901844

ISBN

978-145034031-1

More information

Latest update

9/25/2020