Priming users with babies’ gestures: Investigating the influences of priming with different development origin of image schemas in gesture elicitation study

Yanming He, Qizhang Sun, Peiyao Cheng*, Shumeng Hou, Lei Zhou

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Gesture elicitation study is an effective method to design gestures for various contexts. Through involving end-users, GES results in intuitive gestures because they directly reflect end-users’ mental models and preferences. However, limited by personal experience, end-users are not capable of taking full advantages of technology while proposing gestures, which is referred as legacy bias. To overcome this, previous studies demonstrate that users’ performance can be improved by priming, such as viewing gestures, watching fictional movies, and experiencing framed scenarios. This research extends this line of studies by considering the developmental origin of image schemas in priming. More specifically, we compared the influences of no-priming, priming with early image schemas (EIS), and priming with late image schemas (LIS) on GES. Controlled experiments were conducted (N = 120) along the three stages of GES: users’ generation of gestures (Experiment 1), final gesture sets (Experiment 2), and end-users’ learnability of gestures (Experiment 3). Results show that users are largely influenced by developmental origin of image schemas in priming. LIS-priming improve gesture proposal production in comparison to no-priming condition. As for end-users’ evaluation, EIS-priming gestures exhibit higher initial and overall learnability.

Original languageEnglish
Article number103288
JournalInternational Journal of Human Computer Studies
Volume189
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2024

Keywords

  • Developmental origin of image schemas
  • Gesture elicitation study
  • Image schemas
  • Priming

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