Are Users Better Able to Correctly Interpret Single or Concatenated Auditory Icons that Convey a Complex Message?

Auditory icons are naturally occurring sounds that systems play to convey information. Systems must convey complex messages. To do so, systems can play: 1) a single sound that represents the entire message, or 2) a single sound that represents the first part of the message, followed by another sound...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting 2022-09, Vol.66 (1), p.1100-1104
Hauptverfasser: Choi, Jinwoo, Lodinger, Natalie, Jones, Keith S., Siami Namin, Akbar, Armstrong, Miriam, Sears, David
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container_title Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting
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creator Choi, Jinwoo
Lodinger, Natalie
Jones, Keith S.
Siami Namin, Akbar
Armstrong, Miriam
Sears, David
description Auditory icons are naturally occurring sounds that systems play to convey information. Systems must convey complex messages. To do so, systems can play: 1) a single sound that represents the entire message, or 2) a single sound that represents the first part of the message, followed by another sound that represents the next part of that message, etc. The latter are known as concatenated auditory icons. To evaluate those approaches, participants interpreted single and concatenated auditory icons designed to convey their message well and poorly. Single auditory icons designed to convey their message well were correctly interpreted more often than those designed to convey their message poorly; that was not true for concatenated auditory icons. Concatenated auditory icons should not be comprised of a series of sounds that each represents its piece of a message well. The whole of a concatenated auditory icon is not the sum of its parts.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/1071181322661416
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title Are Users Better Able to Correctly Interpret Single or Concatenated Auditory Icons that Convey a Complex Message?
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