CS547 Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (Seminar on People, Computers, and Design)
Fridays 12:50-2:05 · Gates B01 · Open to the public- 20 years of speakers
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February 26, 1999
Our ability to develop robust multimodal systems will depend on knowledge of the natural integration patterns that typify people's combined use of different input modes. This talk will begin by giving an overview of the research goals, methods, and results of our recent research on users' multimodal interaction while speaking and writing to interactive map systems. The results of this work address basic issues such as: (1) when users do and do not interact multimodally, (2) how multimodal input is integrated and synchronized, (3) what propositional content is carried by different modes, and (4) whether users are consistent and similar to one another in their integration patterns. Based on the empirical evidence from this research as well as what the linguistics literature indicates about natural multimodal communication, I will summarize what we currently know about multimodal integration from a cognitive science perspective. Then I will discuss ten currently fashionable computational "myths" about multimodal integration - and how they run contrary to the reality of empirical evidence. The long-term goal of this research is the development of predictive models of natural modality integration to guide the design of emerging multimodal architectures. |
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