Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

skip to main content
10.5555/2906831.2906950acmconferencesArticle/Chapter ViewAbstractPublication PageshriConference Proceedingsconference-collections
abstract

User Feedback on Physical Marker Interfaces for Protecting Visual Privacy from Mobile Robots

Published: 07 March 2016 Publication History

Abstract

We present a study that examines the efficiency and usability of three different interfaces for specifying which objects should be kept private (i.e., not visible) in an office environment. Our study context is a robot "janitor" system that has the ability to blur out specified objects from its video feed. One interface is a traditional point-and-click GUI on a computer monitor, while the other two operate in the real, physical space: users either place markers on the objects to indicate privacy or use a wand tool to point at them. This late-breaking report presents qualitative feedback from users for improving the interfaces.

References

[1]
C. Nass, J. Steuer, and E. R. Tauber, "Computers Are Social Actors," in Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, ser. CHI '94. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 1994, pp. 72--78.
[2]
R. Calo, "Robots and privacy," in Robot Ethics: The Ethical and Social Implications of Robotics, P. Lin, G. Bekey, and K. Abney, Eds. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2010.
[3]
D. Butler, J. Huang, F. Roesner, and M. Cakmak, "The Privacy-Utility Tradeoff for Remotely Teleoperated Robots," in Proceedings of the 10th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), Portland, OR, 2015.
[4]
A. Hubers, E. Andrulis, T. Stirrat, D. Tran, R. Zhang, R. Sowell, C. M. Grimm, and W. D. Smart, "Video Manipulation Techniques for the Protection of Privacy in Remote Presence Systems," in HRI 2015 Extended Abstracts, Portland, OR, Mar. 2015.

Cited By

View all
  • (2019)Bringing Design to the Privacy TableProceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems10.1145/3290605.3300492(1-17)Online publication date: 2-May-2019

Recommendations

Comments

Please enable JavaScript to view thecomments powered by Disqus.

Information & Contributors

Information

Published In

cover image ACM Conferences
HRI '16: The Eleventh ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human Robot Interaction
March 2016
676 pages
ISBN:9781467383707

Sponsors

In-Cooperation

  • AAAI: American Association for Artificial Intelligence
  • Human Factors & Ergonomics Soc: Human Factors & Ergonomics Soc

Publisher

IEEE Press

Publication History

Published: 07 March 2016

Check for updates

Author Tags

  1. human-robot interaction
  2. interface design
  3. privacy

Qualifiers

  • Abstract

Conference

HRI '16
Sponsor:

Acceptance Rates

HRI '16 Paper Acceptance Rate 45 of 181 submissions, 25%;
Overall Acceptance Rate 268 of 1,124 submissions, 24%

Contributors

Other Metrics

Bibliometrics & Citations

Bibliometrics

Article Metrics

  • Downloads (Last 12 months)3
  • Downloads (Last 6 weeks)0
Reflects downloads up to 27 Nov 2024

Other Metrics

Citations

Cited By

View all
  • (2019)Bringing Design to the Privacy TableProceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems10.1145/3290605.3300492(1-17)Online publication date: 2-May-2019

View Options

Login options

View options

PDF

View or Download as a PDF file.

PDF

eReader

View online with eReader.

eReader

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Share this Publication link

Share on social media