TY - THES A1 - Mohme, Sophia T1 - Visuelle Aufmerksamkeitsverteilung von Anästhesisten bei der Einleitung einer Allgemeinanästhesie in Abhängigkeit von ihrer Erfahrung und der Umgebung T1 - Visual attention of anaesthesiologists during induction of general anaesthesia: effects of real vs. stimulated cases and level of experience N2 - In der vorliegenden experimentellen Studie wurde die visuelle Aufmerksamkeit von Anästhesisten während der Einleitung einer Allgemeinanästhesie in Abhängigkeit von ihrer Erfahrung mithilfe eines mobilen Eye-Tracking-Gerätes untersucht. 12 Assistenten mit durchschnittlich 1,3 Jahren klinischer Erfahrung und ebenfalls 12 Fachärzte mit durchschnittlich circa 10 Jahren klinischer Erfahrung nahmen an der Studie teil. Ebenso wurde der simulierte Fall mit der Anästhesieeinleitung am Patienten verglichen. Beide Anästhesisten-Gruppen führten mit der Eye-Tracking-Brille jeweils eine Einleitung so-wohl an einem Simulator im Simulationsraum als auch am Patienten im Einleitungsraum vor dem OP-Saal durch. Diese Brille zeichnete dabei Daten zu Fixationspunkten und Blickbewegungen der Probanden auf. Angelehnt an Schulz et al.21 wurden 24 Areas of Interest definiert und diese den Gruppen „manuelle Tätigkeiten“, „Überwachung“ und „weitere Beobachtungspunkte“ zugeordnet. Als abhängige Variable für die statistische Auswertung wurde die relative Verweildauer in Prozent genutzt und eine multivariate ANOVA gerechnet. Es ergab sich im Wesentlichen kein signifikanter Effekt des Faktors Erfahrung. Die Assistenten verteilten ihre visuelle Aufmerksamkeit nicht signifikant anders als die erfahreneren Anästhesisten und verhielten sich folglich in Bezug darauf weitgehend gleich. Der Erwerb dieses Verhaltens findet demnach anscheinend schon sehr früh statt, sodass mit 1,3 Jahren Erfahrung in dieser Hinsicht kein Unterschied zu deutlich mehr Erfahrung auftritt. Ein halbstandardisiertes Interview stützt diese Annahme. Der Faktor Umgebung beeinflusste aber signifikant das Verhalten der Anästhesisten. In der Simula-tion widmeten beide Gruppen sowohl der „Überwachung“ insgesamt als auch „manu-ellen Tätigkeiten“ während der Vorbereitungsphase mehr visuelle Aufmerksamkeit als in der Narkoseeinleitung am Patienten. Das ist einerseits mit den Einschränkungen der Simulationspuppe zu erklären und liegt andererseits wahrscheinlich an der ungewohn-ten Umgebung und der unbekannten Pflegekraft, sodass die Anästhesisten das Material länger kontrollierten. Folglich schauten beide Gruppen während der Narkoseeinleitung am Patienten häufiger auf „weitere Beobachtungspunkte“, was auch durch die höhere Komplexität und Störanfälligkeit dieser Situation schlüssig wirkt. Optimierungsmöglichkeiten der Bedingungen im Simulationsraum werden angespro-chen, Anschlussstudien vorgeschlagen. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass der Einsatz eines Eye-Tracking-Gerätes auch während der hochsensiblen Einleitung einer Allgemein-anästhesie am Patienten problemlos möglich ist. Darüber hinaus liefert die Studie nun eine stark standardisierte Versuchsmethode, welche für weitere Forschungsfragen sehr empfohlen werden kann. N2 - The present experimental study investigates the visual attention of anaesthesiologists during the induction of general anaesthesia as a function of their clinical experience using a mobile eye-tracking device. 12 residents with an average of 1.3 years of clinical experience and 12 consultants with an average of about 10 years of clinical experience participated in the study. Both groups of anaesthesiologists used eye-tracking glasses to carry out an induction of anaesthesia in a simulator in the simulation room and in a patient in the induction room in front of the operating theatre. Both situations were subsequently compared. The glasses recorded data on fixation points and eye movement of the test persons. Based on Schulz et al., 24 areas of interest were defined and assigned to the categories "manual activities", "monitoring" and "further observation points". As a dependent variable for the statistical evaluation, the relative dwell time in percent was used and a multivariate ANOVA was calculated. The factor ‘experience’ essentially did not alter eye movement behaviour. The residents did not distribute their visual attention significantly different than the more experienced anaesthetists and therefore behaved largely the same in this respect. Acquiring this behaviour thus seems to take place early during specialty training. A semi-standardised interview supports this assumption. The environmental factor however significantly influenced the behaviour of anaesthetists. The two groups devoted more visual attention to both “monitoring” and “manual activities” during the preparation phase of the simulation compared to induction of anaesthesia in the patient. On the one hand this can be explained by the limitations of the simulation mannequin and on the other hand is probably due to the unfamiliar environment and nurse, thus leading to the physicians handling the material themselves for a prolonged period of time. Consequently both groups looked at "further observation points" more frequently during induction of anaesthesia in the patient, which also seems conclusive due to this situations’ higher complexity and susceptibility to failure. Possibilities for optimising the conditions in the simulation room are being discussed and follow-up studies are being proposed. It could be shown that the use of an eye-tracking device is possible without introducing problems even during the highly sensitive induction of general anaesthesia in the patient. In addition, the study provides a highly standardised testing method, which can be recommended for further research questions. KW - Anästhesie KW - Augenfolgebewegung KW - Visuelle Aufmerksamkeit KW - Augenbewegungen KW - Narkoseeinleitung KW - Allgemeinanästhesie KW - Eye-Tracking Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-198519 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sonnenberg, Christoph A1 - Bannert, Maria T1 - Discovering the Effects of Metacognitive Prompts on the Sequential Structure of SRL-Processes Using Process Mining Techniques JF - Journal of Learning Analystics N2 - According to research examining self‐regulated learning (SRL), we regard individual regulation as a specific sequence of regulatory activities. Ideally, students perform various learning activities, such as analyzing, monitoring, and evaluating cognitive and motivational aspects during learning. Metacognitive prompts can foster SRL by inducing regulatory activities, which, in turn, improve the learning outcome. However, the specific effects of metacognitive support on the dynamic characteristics of SRL are not understood. Therefore, the aim of our study was to analyze the effects of metacognitive prompts on learning processes and outcomes during a computer‐based learning task. Participants of the experimental group (EG, n=35) were supported by metacognitive prompts, whereas participants of the control group (CG, n=35) received no support. Data regarding learning processes were obtained by concurrent think‐aloud protocols. The EG exhibited significantly more metacognitive learning events than did the CG. Furthermore, these regulatory activities correspond positively with learning outcomes. Process mining techniques were used to analyze sequential patterns. Our findings indicate differences in the process models of the EG and CG and demonstrate the added value of taking the order of learning activities into account by discovering regulatory patterns. KW - HeuristicsMiner algorithm KW - self‐regulated learning KW - metacognitive prompting KW - process analysis KW - process mining KW - think‐aloud data Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-152362 UR - http://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/JLA/article/view/4090 SN - 1929‐7750 N1 - Dieser Artikel ist auch Bestandteil der Dissertation: Sonnenberg, Christoph: Analyzing Technology-Enhanced Learning Processes: What Can Process Mining Techniques Contribute to the Evaluation of Instructional Support?. - Würzburg, Univ., Diss., 2017. - [online]. URN: urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-152354 VL - 2 IS - 1 ER - TY - THES A1 - Pieger, Elisabeth T1 - Metacognition and Disfluency – The Effects of Disfluency on Monitoring and Performance T1 - Metakognition und Disfluency - Der Einfluss von Disfluency auf die Überwachung des Lernprozesses und auf die Leistung N2 - In this thesis, metacognition research is connected with fluency research. Thereby, the focus lies on how disfluency can be used to improve metacognitive monitoring (i.e., students` judgments during the learning process). Improving metacognitive monitoring is important in educational contexts in order to foster performance. Theories about metacognition and self-regulated learning suppose that monitoring affects control and performance. Accurate monitoring is necessary to initiate adequate control and better performance. However, previous research shows that students are often not able to accurately monitor their learning with meaningful text material. Inaccurate monitoring can result in inadequate control and low performance. One reason for inaccurate monitoring is that students use cues for their judgments that are not valid predictors of their performance. Because fluency might be such a cue, the first aim of this thesis is to investigate under which conditions fluency is used as a cue for judgments during the learning process. A fluent text is easy to process and, hence, it should be judged as easy to learn and as easy to remember. Inversely, a disfluent text is difficult to process, for example because of a disfluent font type (e.g., Mistral) or because of deleted letters (e.g., l_tt_rs). Hence, a disfluent text should be judged as difficult to learn and as difficult to remember. This assumption is confirmed when students learn with both fluent and disfluent material. When fluency is manipulated between persons, fluency seems to be less obvious as a cue for judgments. However, there are only a few studies that investigated the effects of fluency on judgments when fluency is manipulated between persons. Results from Experiment 1 (using deleted letters for disfluent text) and from Experiment 4 (using Mistral for disfluent text) in this thesis support the assumption that fluency is used as a cue for judgments in between-person designs. Thereby, however, the interplay with the type of judgment and the learning stage seems to matter. Another condition when fluency affects judgments was investigated in Experiment 2 and 3. The aim of these experiments was to investigate if disfluency leads to analytic monitoring and if analytic monitoring sustains for succeeding fluent material. If disfluency activates analytic monitoring that remains for succeeding fluent material, fluency should no longer be used as a cue for judgments. Results widely support this assumption for deleted letters (Experiment 2) as well as for the font type Mistral (Experiment 3). Thereby, again the interplay between the type of judgment and the learning stage matters. Besides the investigation of conditions when fluency is used as a cue for different types of judgments during the learning process, another aim of this thesis is to investigate if disfluency leads to accurate monitoring. Results from Experiment 3 and 4 support the assumption that Mistral can reduce overconfidence. This is the case when fluency is manipulated between persons or when students first learn with a fluent and then with a disfluent text. Dependent from the type of judgment and the learning stage, disfluency can lead even to underconfidence or to improved relative monitoring accuracy (Experiment 4). Improving monitoring accuracy is only useful when monitoring is implemented into better control and better performance. The effect of monitoring accuracy on control and performance was in the focus of Experiment 4. Results show that accurate monitoring does not result in improved control and performance. Thus, further research is required to develop interventions that do not only improve monitoring accuracy but that also help students to implement accurate monitoring into better control and performance. Summing up, the aim of this thesis is to investigate under which conditions fluency is used as a cue for judgments during the learning process, how disfluency can be used to improve monitoring accuracy, and if improved monitoring accuracy leads to improved performance. By connecting metacognition research and fluency research, further theories about metacognition and theories about fluency are specified. Results show that not only the type of fluency and the design, but also the type of judgment, the type of monitoring accuracy, and the learning stage should be taken into account. Understanding conditions that affect the interplay between metacognitive processes and performance as well as understanding the underlying mechanisms is necessary to enable systematic research and to apply findings into educational settings. N2 - Ziel dieser Dissertation ist es, den Einfluss von Disfluency auf metakognitive Einschätzungen sowie deren Genauigkeit und deren Einfluss auf die Leistung zu untersuchen. Dabei wird die Metakognitions- mit der Fluency-Forschung verbunden. Theorien der Metakognition und des Selbstregulierten Lernens postulieren, dass metakognitive Einschätzungen den Lernprozess sowie die Leistung beeinflussen. Genaue Einschätzungen der eigenen Leistung sind notwendig, um adäquate Lernprozesse zu initiieren und die Leistung zu verbessern. In der bisherigen Forschung zeigte sich allerdings, dass Personen ihre eigene Leistung häufig falsch einschätzen, v. a. beim Lernen mit Texten. Als Folge ungenauer Einschätzungen können dysfunktionale Lernprozesse sowie schlechtere Leistung resultieren. Ein möglicher Grund für ungenaue Einschätzungen ist die Verwendung von Cues (Hinweisreizen), die keine validen Prädiktoren für die Leistung sind. Ein solcher Cue könnte Fluency sein. Fluente Texte sind leicht zu verarbeiten und sollten deshalb auch als leicht zu lernen und als leicht zu erinnern eingeschätzt werden. Umgekehrt sollten Texte, deren Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit beispielsweise durch eine disfluente Schriftart (z. B. Mistral) oder durch Löschung von Buchstaben (z. B. B_chst_b_n) herabgesetzt ist, als schwerer zu lernen und zu erinnern eingeschätzt werden. Diese Annahme wurde bisher v. a. dann bestätigt, wenn Personen sowohl mit fluentem als auch disfluentem Material lernen. Wird Fluency zwischen Personen manipuliert, scheint Fluency ein weniger offensichtlicher Cue zu sein. Allerdings ist die Anzahl an Studien, die Fluency zwischen Personen manipuliert haben, begrenzt. In dieser Dissertation wurde sowohl in Experiment 1 für die Löschung von Buchstaben, als auch in Experiment 4 für die Schriftart Mistral bestätigt, dass auch eine Manipulation zwischen Personen Einschätzungen beeinflussen kann, wobei jeweils die Interaktion mit der Art der Einschätzung und dem Zeitpunkt im Lernprozess berücksichtigt werden müssen. Eine weitere Bedingung, unter der Fluency die Einschätzungen beeinflusst, wurde in Experiment 2 und 3 untersucht. Ziel dieser Experimente war es u. a. herauszufinden, ob Disfluency zu einer analytischeren Überwachung des eigenen Lernprozesses führt und ob diese auch für nachfolgendes fluentes Material anhält. Als Folge analytischer Überwachungsprozesse für disfluentes und fluentes Material sollte Fluency nicht länger als Cue für Einschätzungen verwendet werden. Die Ergebnisse bestätigen dies weitgehend sowohl für die Löschung von Buchstaben (Experiment 2) als auch für die Verwendung der Schriftart Mistral (Experiment 3). Auch hier gibt es allerdings Interaktionen mit der Art der Einschätzung und dem Zeitpunkt im Lernprozess. Neben der Untersuchung, unter welchen der genannten Bedingungen Fluency Effekte auf verschiedene Arten von Einschätzungen im Lernprozess gefunden werden, ist es ein weiteres Ziel dieser Dissertation zu untersuchen, ob Disfluency durch die Initiierung analytischer Überwachungsprozesse auch zu genaueren Einschätzungen führt. Die Befunde aus Experiment 3 und 4 zeigen, dass Mistral die oft gefundene Überschätzung reduziert, wenn die Fluency zwischen Personen manipuliert wird oder zuerst mit fluentem und anschließend mit disfluentem Text gelernt wird. Abhängig von der Art der Einschätzung und des Zeitpunkts im Lernprozess kann Mistral sogar zu Unterschätzung führen und auch die relative Genauigkeit verbessern (Experiment 4). Eine Verbesserung der Genauigkeit von Einschätzungen ist v. a. dann sinnvoll, wenn genauere Einschätzungen auch zu besseren Lernprozessen und zu besserer Leistung führen. Dies wurde in Experiment 4 untersucht. Hier zeigte sich allerdings, dass genauere Einschätzungen nicht zu einer besseren Leistung führen. Deshalb sollten in der weiteren Forschung Interventionen entwickelt werden, die nicht nur die Genauigkeit von Einschätzungen, sondern auch deren Transfer in bessere Lernprozesse und in bessere Leistung fördern. Insgesamt ist es also das Ziel dieser Dissertation zu untersuchen, wann Disfluency verschiedene Einschätzungen im Lernprozess beeinflusst, ob Disfluency zu analytischeren und genaueren Einschätzungen führt, und ob genauere Einschätzungen letztendlich in besserer Leistung resultieren. Die Verbindung der Metakognitions- mit der Fluency-Forschung ermöglicht dabei, nicht nur Theorien zur Metakognition sondern auch zur Fluency zu spezifizieren. Wie die Befunde zeigen, müssen nicht nur verschiedene Arten der Fluency und des Designs, sondern auch verschiedene Arten von Einschätzungen und deren Genauigkeit, sowie der Zeitpunkt der Einschätzung im Lernprozess berücksichtigt werden. Die Kenntnis von Zusammenhängen und Bedingungen sowie von zugrundeliegenden Mechanismen ist wichtig, um bisherige inkonsistente Befunde systematisieren zu können und schließlich lernförderliche Interventionen ableiten zu können. KW - Metakognition KW - Selbstgesteuertes Lernen KW - Textverstehen KW - Lernen KW - Verarbeitungsflüssigkeit KW - metacognition KW - metacomprehension KW - judgments KW - overconfidence KW - monitoring KW - control KW - fluency KW - disfluency KW - learning Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-155362 ER - TY - THES A1 - Schaper, Philipp T1 - Errors in Prospective Memory T1 - Fehler im Prospektiven Gedächtnis N2 - Prospektives Gedächtnis beschreibt die Fähigkeit Intentionen zu einem späteren Zeitpunkt als Reaktion auf einen Hinweisreiz auszuführen. Derartige Aufgaben finden sich zahlreich in Alltags- wie auch Arbeitskontexten, waren aber im Gegensatz zum retrospektiven Gedächtnis lange Zeit nicht im Fokus der Forschung. Erst die Arbeit von Harris (1984) und insbesondere der Artikel von Einstein and McDaniel (1990) wurden Ausgangspunkte eines sich stetig vergrößernden Forschungsfeldes. Aufbauend auf dieser Forschung werden im Rahmen dieser Dissertationsschrift fünf Journal-Artikel präsentiert und verknüpft, die das Verständnis zum prospektiven Gedächtnis durch die Betrachtung von möglichen Fehlern erweitern. Die erste Studie beschäftigt sich mit der Frage ob zusätzliche kognitiven Ressourcen benötigt werden um eine Intention zwischen dem Hinweisreiz und ihrer Ausführung aufrecht zu erhalten. Die Folgerungen von Einstein, McDaniel, Williford, Pagan, and Dismukes (2003), die eine derartige Aufrechterhaltung vorschlugen konnten nicht repliziert werden. In der zweiten Studie konnte gezeigt werden, dass Unterbrechungen zwischen Hinweisreiz und Ausführung der Intention insbesondere dann negative Folgen zeigen, wenn sie mit einem Kontextwechsel verbunden sind. In den Studien drei bis fünf stand das irrtümliche Ausführen von beendeten prospektiven Gedächtnisaufgaben im Zentrum der Untersuchung. Hier konnte nicht nur gezeigt werden, dass die bisherige Theorie zur Vorhersage derartiger Fehler, die vor allem auf Unterdrückung der Reaktion beruht (Bugg, Scullin, & Rauvola, 2016), mit den Ergebnissen speziell zu deren Prüfung entworfener Experimente nicht zu vereinbaren ist. Darüber hinaus wurde im Rahmen der Untersuchungen eine Modifikation der Theorie ausgearbeitet, die besser geeignet erscheint sowohl bisherige Ergebnisse als auch die hinzugekommenen Experimente vorherzusagen. Über alle fünf Artikel wird zusätzlich verdeutlicht, dass der Moment in dem der Hinweisreiz präsentiert wird eine noch größere Rolle zu spielen scheint, als durch bisherige Forschung deutlich geworden ist. N2 - Prospective memory is the ability to implement intentions at a later point in time in response to a specified cue. Such prospective memory tasks often occur in daily living and workplace situations. However, in contrast to retrospective memory there has been relatively little research on prospective memory. The studies by Harris (1984) and Einstein and MacDaniel (1990) served as a starting point for a now steadily growing area of research. Based on this emerging field of study this dissertation presents and connects and five journal articles, which further explore prospective memory by focusing on its potential errors. The first article addresses the question if additional cognitive resources are needed after a prospective memory cue occurs to keep the intention active until it is implemented. The theory by Einstein, McDaniel, Williford, Pagan and Dismukes (2003), which suggested this active maintenance, could not be replicated. The second article demonstrated that interruptions between cue and the window of opportunity to implement the intention reduce prospective memory performance, especially if the interruption is tied with a change of context. Article three to five were focused on the erroneous implementation of a no longer active prospective memory task, so called commission errors. The suggested mechanism for their occurrence, the dual-mechanism account (Bugg, Scullin, & Rauvola, 2016), was not suited to explain the present results. A modification for the dual-mechanism account was formulated, which can account for prior work, as well as for the present data. The results of all five articles also indicate that the moment of cue retrieval is even more relevant for prospective memory and its errors than previously accounted for. KW - Gedächtnis KW - Prospektives Gedächtnis KW - prospective memory KW - commission error Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-175217 ER - TY - CHAP ED - Brill, Michael ED - Jonsson, Gudberg ED - Schwab, Frank T1 - Research Network on Methodology for the Analysis of Social Interaction. Proceedings of the ninth meeting of MASI. T1 - Forschungsnetzwerk zur Methodik der Analyse sozialer Interaktionen. Berichte des neunten Meetings von MASI. N2 - T-pattern analysis supports studies of various aspects of human or animal behavior as well as interaction between human subjects and animal or artificial agents. The following proceedings give an overiew on the application of T-pattern analysis in different research fields like media, gaming, human behaviour, social and organisational interaction as well as sports and health. KW - Verhaltensmuster KW - T-Pattern KW - Theme KW - human behaviour KW - social interaction KW - detection KW - Verhaltensanalyse KW - Interaktion KW - Nonverbal KW - MASI KW - Untersuchungsinstrument KW - Muster KW - Bewegung KW - Gestik Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-147135 SN - 978-3-945459-16-4 ER - TY - THES A1 - Göbel [geb. Aichele], Thorsten Philipp T1 - Marginalien als Explikation der lokalen Makrostruktur beim Lernen mit Hypertext T1 - Marginalia as an Explication of Local Macrostructure in Hypertext Learning N2 - Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden vier Experimente zur Eignung von Marginalien als Lernhilfen im Hypertext durchgeführt. Die grundlegende Annahme lautet dabei, dass Marginalien als Kommentar zum Text aufgefasst werden und somit im Vergleich zu intratextuellen Lernhilfen wie Überschriften oder absatzeinleitenden Makropropositionen zu einer interaktiven und tieferen Verarbeitung der Lerninhalte führen. Als Lernmedium wurden eine hierarchische Hypertextumgebung zum Thema Fragebogenkonstruktion und eine netzförmige Hypertextumgebung zur Bedeutung des Buchdrucks in der Medientheorie eingesetzt. Experiment 1 (N= 41) verglich mittels between-Design die Lernleistung bei Marginalien mit einer Präsentation derselben Makropropositionen als absatzeinleitende Topic-Sätze und einer Platzierung der Makropropositionen am Absatzende. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass absatzweise Marginalien im Vergleich zu absatzeinleitenden Makropropositionen und der Kontrollgruppe zu einem besseren Abschneiden bei geschlossenen Inferenzfragen führen. Hinsichtlich geschlossener Fragen zur Textbasis konnten jedoch die absatzeinleitenden Makropropositionen im Vergleich mit den beiden anderen Bedingungen die besten Ergebnisse erzielen. Experiment 2 (N= 105) verglich den Einfluss von Marginalien mit Überschriften und einer Kontrollgruppe ohne absatzweise Explikation der Makrostruktur auf das Schreiben einer Zusammenfassung des Lerntextes. Zusätzlich wurden erneut geschlossene Inferenzfragen präsentiert. Ergänzend wurde das Rezeptionsverhalten mittels Blickbewegungsmessung ermittelt. Dabei zeigten sich signifikante Unterschiede zwischen Überschriften und Marginalien. Marginalien wurden in der hierarchischen Hypertextumgebung allgemein seltener gelesen als Überschriften und zeigten auch hinsichtlich der Anzahl der strategischen Rezeptionen und der absatzeinleitenden Rezeption geringere Werte. Einzig nach der Rezeption des zugehörigen Absatzes wurden Marginalien häufiger konsultiert als Überschriften. Diese Unterschiede gingen einher mit signifikanten Einbußen der Lernleistung der Marginalienbedingung im Vergleich zur Überschriftenbedingung. So erinnerten Lerner mit Marginalien weniger explizite Makropropositionen des Lerntextes, weniger Fakteninformationen, sowie weniger Inhalte verschiedener Hypertextknoten und bildeten außerdem weniger eigene Makropropositionen. Hinsichtlich der letzten beiden Variablen war die Marginalienbedingung sogar der Kontrollbedingung unterlegen. Experiment 3 (N = 54) verwendete im Gegensatz zu den Experimenten 1 und 2 einen netzförmig organisierten Hypertext mit embedded Links anstelle eines Navigationsmenüs. Die untersuchten Versuchsbedingungen sowie die Messung der Lernleistung waren jedoch analog zu Experiment 1. Auch hier konnte ein Effekt von Marginalien auf die Inferenzleistung nachgewiesen werden. Allerdings schnitten Marginalien nur besser als die absatzeinleitenden Makropropositionen ab, wohin-gegen kein Unterschied zur Kontrollbedingung festgestellt werden konnten. Hinsichtlich der Leistung bei geschlossenen Faktenfragen konnte die Überlegenheit absatzeinleitender Makropropositionen gegenüber den anderen beiden Präsentationsformen der Makrostruktur erneut bestätigt werden. Experiment 4 (N= 75) verglich analog zu Experiment 2 unter Verwendung der netzförmigen Lernumgebung aus Experiment 3 erneut den Einfluss von Marginalien, Überschriften und einer Kontrollbedingung ohne explizite absatzweise Makropropositionen auf das Schreiben einer Zusammenfassung sowie die Beantwortung geschlossener Inferenzfragen. Auch die Blickbewegungsmessung kam wieder zum Einsatz. Die Ergebnisse von Experiment 2 konnten jedoch nicht bestätigt werden. Es fanden sich keine signifikanten Unterschiede hinsichtlich der Lernleistung zwischen den drei Versuchsbedingungen und auch hinsichtlich des Rezeptionsverhaltens konnte eine Angleichung von Marginalien und Überschriften festgestellt werden. Hinsichtlich der Lernleistung wird angenommen, dass die embedded Links in Kombination mit der Instruktion, eine Zusammenfassung zu schreiben mit den Überschriften und den Marginalien, die jedoch im Vergleich zu Experiment 2 fast vollständig wie Überschriften genutzt wurden, interferiert haben und somit eine Hemmung dieser Lernhilfen stattgefunden hat. Anhand der vier durchgeführten Experimente wird gefolgert, dass Marginalien als Explikation der lokalen Makrostruktur sowohl bei hierarchisch strukturiertem Hypertext als auch bei netzförmig organisiertem Hypertext unter der Instruktion eines verstehenden Lernens eine Verbesserung der Inferenzleistung bewirken können. Lautet die Instruktion jedoch, eine Zusammenfassung der In-halte zu schreiben, sind Marginalien speziell bei hierarchisch strukturiertem Hypertext wenig geeignet, die Lernleistung zu fördern. N2 - Four experiments were conducted to compare marginalia with other textual learning aids. The basic assumption was that marginalia are perceived as a comment to the text and therefore should foster a more interactive and deeper processing of the text’s content compared to classical structure aids like headings or topic sentences. Two experiments used a hierarchical structured hypertext on questionnaire design. The other two experiments applied an ill-structured hypertext with embedded links on the relevance of the Gutenberg-Revolution for media theory. Experiment 1 (N= 41) compared learning gains of marginalia with two other alternative but unsignaled placings of the same macropropositions: topic sentences and paragraph-terminal macropropositions. Results indicate that marginalia for each paragraph outperformed both other conditions on inference performance, measured via single choice questions. Concerning the recognition of factual information, topic sentences outperformed both other conditions. In experiment 2 (N= 105) marginalia were compared with heading and a control group without explicit macropropositions for each paragraph. Participants had to write a summary and answer single-choice inference questions. In addition to learning outcomes strategic reading behavior was obtained via eyetracking. Marginalia were read less frequent than headings, especially at the beginning of a corresponding paragraph. Further, marginalia also showed less strategic receptions. Concerning the summaries, learners in the marginalia condition produced less self-generated macropropositions than both other groups and wrote down less macropropositions that were explicitly mentioned in the text. In addition, learners in the marginalia condition retrived less information from fewer hypertext nodes than learners in both other conditions. Marginalia outperformed headings only in the number of receptions after the corresponding paragraph. No differences on inference performance were found. Experiment 3 (N = 54) applied an ill-structured hypertext instead of the well-structured hierarchical hypertext in experiments 1 and 2. Instead of a navigation menu, participants had to navigate the hypertext with embedded hyperlinks. The experimental manipulation and the dependent variables were similar to experiment 1, although the subject of the text was not the same as in experiment 1. As in experiment 1, marginalia outperformed paragraph-initial topic sentences on inference performance. However, in contrast to experiment 1 marginalia did not outperform the control condition. Concerning the recognition of factual information, topic sentences outperformed both other conditions again, indicating the assumed effect of oversignalization for both, well-structured and ill-structured hypertext. Finally, experiment 4 (N= 75) used the same hypertext as experiment 3 and the same manipulations and measuring methods as experiment 2. Neither the summaries nor the inference questions showed any significant difference among the three experimental conditions. Only the Eyetracking data obtained a small number of significant differences in the reception of headings and marginalia. As the differences in learning performance from experiment 2 vanished and differences in the reception of headings and marginalia also decreased, a possible interaction of the learning goal with the hypertext structure is discussed that might have interfered the positive effects of the learning aids. Based on those four experiments, marginalia as an alternative explication of the macrostructure are recommended for both, well-structured hypertext as well as for ill-structured hypertext insofar as the learning goal is a deep comprehension of the text and not the production of an exact summary of the text. Marginalia only seem to foster inference performance but not the factual textbase. However, this is accordance with the assumed benefits of hypertext over linear text. KW - Hypertext KW - Marginalien KW - Lernen KW - Textverstehen KW - Makropropositionen KW - Makrostruktur KW - Access Structure KW - Randbemerkung KW - Construction-Integration-Model Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-148136 ER - TY - THES A1 - Münchow, Hannes T1 - I feel, therefore I learn – Effectiveness of affect induction interventions and possible covariates on learning outcomes T1 - I feel, therefore I learn – Effektivität von Affektinduktionsinterventionen und mögliche Kovariaten auf den Lernerfolg N2 - Affective states in the context of learning and achievement can influence the learning process essentially. The impact of affective states can be both directly on the learning performance and indirectly mediated via, for example, motivational processes. Positive activating affect is often associated with increased memory skills as well as advantages in creative problem solving. Negative activating affect on the other hand is regarded to impair learning outcomes because of promoting task-irrelevant thinking. While these relationships were found to be relatively stable in correlation studies, causal relationships have been examined rarely so far. This dissertation aims to investigate the effects of positive and negative affective states in multimedia learning settings and to identify potential moderating factors. Therefore, three experimental empirical studies on university students were conducted. In Experiment 1, N = 57 university students were randomly allocated to either a positive or negative affect induction group. Affects were elicited using short film clips. After a 20-minute learning phase in a hypertext-based multimedia learning environment on “functional neuroanatomy” the learners’ knowledge as well as transfer performance were measured. It was assumed that inducing positive activating affect should enhance learning performance. Eliciting negative activating affect on the other hand should impair learning performance. However, it was found that the induction of negative activating affect prior to the learning phase resulted in slight deteriorations in knowledge. Contrary to the assumptions, inducing positive activating affect before the learning phase did not improve learning performance. Experiment 2 induced positive activating affect directly during learning. To induce affective states during the entire duration of the learning phase, Experiment 2 used an emotional design paradigm. Therefore, N = 111 university students were randomly assigned to learn either in an affect inducing multimedia learning environment (use of warm colours and round shapes) or an affectively neutral counterpart (using shades of grey and angular shapes) on the same topic as in Experiment 1. Again, knowledge as well as transfer performance were measured after learning for 20 minutes. In addition, positive and negative affective states were measured before and after learning. Complex interaction patterns between the treatment and initial affective states were found. Specifically, learners with high levels of positive affect before learning showed better transfer performance when they learned in the affect inducing learning environment. Regarding knowledge, those participants who reported high levels of negative activating affect prior to the learning period performed worse. However, the effect on knowledge did not occur for those students learning in the affect inducing learning environment. For knowledge, the treatment therefore protected against poorer performance due to high levels of negative affective states. Results of Experiment 2 showed that the induction of positive activating affect influenced learning performance positively when taking into account affective states prior to the learning phase. In order to confirm these interaction effects, a conceptual replication of the previous experiment was conducted in Experiment 3. Experiment 3 largely retained the former study design, but changed the learning materials and tests used. Analogous to Experiment 2, N = 145 university students learning for 20 minutes in either an affect inducing or an affectively neutral multimedia learning environment on “eukaryotic cell”. To strengthen the treatment, Experiment 3 also used anthropomorphic design elements to induce affective states next to warm colours and round shapes. Moreover, in order to assess the change in affective states more exactly, an additional measurement of positive and negative affective states after half of the learning time was inserted. Knowledge and transfer were assessed again to measure learning performance. The learners’ memory skills were used as an additional learning outcome. To control the influence of potential confounding variables, the participants’ general and current achievement motivation as well as interest, and emotion regulation skills were measured. Contrary to the assumptions, Experiment 3 could not confirm the interaction effects of Experiment 2. Instead, there was a significant impact of positive activating affect prior to the learning phase on transfer, irrespective of the learners’ group affiliation. This effect was further independent of the control variables that were measured. Nevertheless, the results of Experiment 3 fit into the picture of findings regarding “emotional design” in hypermedia learning settings. To date, the few publications that have used this approach propose heterogeneous results, even when using identical materials and procedures. N2 - Affektiven Zuständen im Lern- und Leistungskontext wird ein wesentlicher Einfluss auf den Lernprozess zugesprochen. Dabei wirken diese sowohl direkt auf die Lernleistung als auch indirekt vermittelt über beispielsweise motivationale Prozesse. Positive aktivierende Affekte stehen dabei oft im Zusammenhang mit erhöhter Gedächtnisleistung und kreativer Problemlösefähigkeit. Negative aktivierende Affekte anderseits werden eher als lernhinderlich angesehen, da sie aufgabenirrelevantes Denken fördern. Während sich diese Zusammenhänge im Rahmen korrelativer Studien als relativ stabil erwiesen haben, sind kausale Beziehungen bislang noch eher selten untersucht. Diese Arbeit hat daher zum Ziel, die Auswirkungen von positiven und negativen aktivierenden affektiven Zuständen beim Lernen mit Hypermedien genauer zu betrachten und mögliche moderierende Einflussfaktoren zu erkennen. Dabei wurden drei experimentelle empirische Studien mit Universitätsstudierenden durchgeführt. In Experiment 1 wurde Studierenden (N = 57) zufällig positiver oder negativer aktivierender Affekt mithilfe von kurzen Filmsequenzen induziert. Nach einer 20-minütigen Lernphase in einer hypertextbasierten multimedialen Lernumgebung zum Thema „Funktionelle Neuroanatomie“ wurden die Verständnis - und Transferleistungen der Studierenden gemessen. Es wurde dabei angenommen, dass sich positiver aktivierender Affekt vor dem Lernen positiv auf die Lernleistung auswirkt, während vor dem Lernen induzierter negativer aktivierender Affekt die entgegengesetzte Wirkung haben sollte. Es zeigte sich, dass die Induktion von negativem aktivierenden Affekt vor dem Lernen zu einer leichten Verschlechterung der Verständnisleistung führte. Entgegen der Vermutungen zeigten Probanden, bei denen positiver aktivierender Affekt vor dem Lernen erzeugt wurde, jedoch keine Verbesserung der Lernleistung. Als mögliche Erklärungsursache hierfür wurde unter anderem angenommen, dass die Affektinduktion vor dem Lernen zwar erfolgreich war, diese Affekte jedoch nicht für die gesamte Dauer der Lernzeit anhielten. In Experiment 2 wurde positiv aktivierender Affekt während der gesamten Lernphase induziert. Dazu wurden N = 111 Universitätsstudierende zufällig einer affektinduzierenden multimedialen Lernumgebung (Verwendung von warmen Farben und runden Formen) oder einem affektneutralen Gegenstück (Verwendung von Grautönen und eckigen Formen) zum Thema „Funktionelle Neuroanatomie“ zugeordnet. Nach einer Lernzeit von 20 Minuten wurden Verständnis- und Transferleistungen gemessen. Es zeigten sich komplexe Interaktionsmuster zwischen dem Treatment und positivem und negativem Affekt vor dem Lernen gefunden: Lernende, die vor dem Lernen stark positiv gestimmt waren, zeigten eine bessere Transferleistung, wenn sie in der affekt-erzeugenden Lernumgebung lernten. Berichteten die Lernenden dagegen hohe Ausprägungen von negativem Affekt vor dem Lernen, so sank ihre Verständnisleistung. Dieser Effekt trat nicht auf, wenn in der affekterzeugenden Lernumgebung gelernt wurde. Für Verständnislernen schützte das Treatment daher vor schlechterer Performanz durch stark ausgeprägten negativen aktivierenden Affekt vor dem Lernen. Die Ergebnisse von Experiment 2 weisen darauf hin, dass die Induktion von positivem aktivierenden Affekt das Lernen positiv beeinflusst, wenn man die Affektausprägungen vor dem Lernen berücksichtigt. In Experiment 3 wurde eine konzeptuelle Replikation des vorangegangenen Experiments durchgeführt. Dazu wurde das Studiendesign größtenteils beibehalten, jedoch die verwendeten Lernmaterialien und Lerntests verändert. Analog zu Experiment 2 lernten N = 145 Studierende für 20 Minuten entweder in einer affekterzeugenden oder einer affektneutralen Lernumgebung zum Thema „Eukaryotische Zellen“. Zu Stärkung des Treatments wurden in Experiment 3 neben warmen Farben und runden Formen auch anthropomorphe Designelemente zur Induktion von positivem aktivierenden Affekt verwendet. Zudem wurde eine zusätzliche Messung des positiven und negativen Affektes nach der Hälfte der Lernzeit eingefügt, um die Veränderung des affektiven Erlebens während des Lernens differenzierter zu erfassen. Als Maße für die Lernleistung wurden erneut Verständnis und Transfer sowie die Gedächtnisleistung erhoben. Um den Einfluss potentieller konfundierender Variablen zu kontrollieren wurden zudem die generelle und aktuelle Leistungsmotivation, das Interesse sowie die Emotionsregulation gemessen. Entgegen der Erwartungen, konnte Experiment 3 die Interaktionseffekte aus Experiment 2 nicht bestätigen. Stattdessen zeigte sich ein signifikanter Einfluss des positiven aktivierenden Affektes vor dem Lernen auf die Transferleistung, unabhängig von der Gruppenzugehörigkeit des Lernenden. Dieser Effekt war unabhängig von den erhobenen Kontrollvariablen. Dennoch passen die Ergebnisse in das heterogene Befundmuster, welches sich durch die wenigen experimentellen Studien zu „emotional design“ beim Lernen abzeichnet. KW - Affekt KW - Leistungsmotivation KW - Lernerfolg KW - emotional design KW - positive and negative affect KW - learning outcomes KW - achievement motivation Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-148432 ER - TY - THES A1 - Hennighausen, Anna Christine T1 - Costly signaling with mobile devices: An evolutionary psychological perspective on smartphones T1 - Mobilgeräte als kostspielige Signale: Smartphones aus einer evolutionspsychologischen Perspektive N2 - In the last decade, mobile device ownership has largely increased. In particular, smartphone ownership is constantly rising (A. Smith, 2015; Statista, 2016a), and there is a real hype for luxury brand smartphones (Griffin, 2015). These observations raise the question of which functions smartphones serve in addition to their original purposes of making and receiving calls, searching for information, and organizing. Beyond these obvious functions, studies suggest that smartphones express fashion, lifestyle, and one’s economic status (e.g., Bødker et al., 2009; Statista, 2016b; Vanden Abeele, Antheunis, & Schouten, 2014). Specifically, individuals seem to purchase and use conspicuous luxury brand smartphones to display and enhance status (D. Kim et al., 2014; Müller-Lietzkow et al., 2014; Suki, 2013). But how does owning a conspicuous, high-status smartphone contribute to status, and which benefits may these status boosts provide to their owners? From an evolutionary perspective, status carries a lot of advantages, particularly for males; high status grants them priority access to resources and correlates with their mating success (van Vugt & Tybur, 2016). In this sense, research suggests that men conspicuously display their cell phones to attract mates and to distinguish themselves from rivals (Lycett & Dunbar, 2000). In a similar vein, evolutionarily informed studies on conspicuous consumption indicate that the purchase and display of conspicuous luxuries (including mobile phones and smartphones) relate to a man’s interest in uncommitted sexual relationships and enhance his desirability as a short-term mate (Hennighausen & Schwab, 2014; Saad, 2013; Sundie et al., 2011). Drawing on these findings, this doctoral dissertation investigated how a man is perceived given that he is an owner of a high-status (vs. nonconspicuous, low-status) smartphone as a romantic partner and male rival. This was done in three experiments. In addition, it was examined how male conspicuous consumption of smartphones interacted with further traits that signal a man’s mate quality, namely facial attractiveness (Studies 1 and 2) and social dominance (Study 3). Study 1 revealed that men and women perceived a male owner of a conspicuous smartphone as a less desirable long-term mate and as more inclined toward short-term mating. Study 2 replicated these results and showed that men and women assigned traits that are associated with short-term mating (e.g., low loyalty, interest in flirts, availability of tangible resources) to a male owner of a conspicuous smartphone and perceived him as a stronger male rival and mate poacher, and less as a friend. The results of Study 2 further suggested that specifically more attractive men might benefit from owning a conspicuous smartphone in a short-term mating context and might be hence considered as stronger male rivals. Study 3 partially replicated the findings of Studies 1 and 2 pertaining to the effects of owning a conspicuous smartphone. Study 3 did not show different effects of conspicuous consumption of smartphones on perceptions of a man dependent on the level of his social dominance. To conclude, the findings of this doctoral dissertation suggest that owning a conspicuous, high-status smartphone might not only serve proximate functions (e.g., making and receiving calls, organization) but also ultimate functions, which relate to mating and reproduction. The results indicate that owning a conspicuous smartphone might yield benefits for men in a short-term rather than in a long-term mating context. Furthermore, more attractive men appear to benefit more from owning a conspicuous smartphone than less attractive men. These findings provide further insights into the motivations that underlie men’s purchases and displays of conspicuous, high-status smartphones from luxury brands that reach beyond the proximate causes frequently described in media and consumer psychological research. By applying an evolutionary perspective, this doctoral dissertation demonstrates the power and utility of this research paradigm for media psychological research and shows how combining a proximate and ultimate perspective adds to a more profound understanding of smartphone phenomena. N2 - In den letzten 10 Jahren ist die Zahl der Personen, die ein Mobilgerät besitzen, stark angestiegen. Insbesondere nimmt die Anzahl der Smartphone-Besitzer stetig zu (A. Smith, 2015; Statista, 2016a). Es ist nahezu ein regelrechter „Smartphone-Hype“ zu beobachten, der sich vor allem um bestimmte Geräte von Luxus-Marken dreht (Griffin, 2015). Diese Beobachtungen lassen die Frage aufkommen, welche Funktionen Smartphones haben, die über ihre eigentlichen Funktionen, wie z.B. Anrufe empfangen und tätigen, Informationssuche und Organisation hinausgehen. Studien zeigen, dass Smartphones zusätzlich zu diesen naheliegenden Funktionen auch Ausdruck von Mode, Lifestyle und Status sein können (z.B. Bødker et al., 2009; Statista, 2016b; Vanden Abeele et al., 2014). Dies scheint besonders auf auffällige Smartphones von Luxus-Marken zu zutreffen: Personen kaufen und nutzen diese Geräte, um ihren sozialen Status zu zeigen und zu steigern (D. Kim et al., 2014; Müller-Lietzkow et al., 2014; Suki, 2013). Wie jedoch kann der Besitz eines auffälligen, statusträchtigen Smartphones den eigenen Status erhöhen und welche Vorteile bringt dies mit sich? Aus einer evolutionären Perspektive hat Status viele Vorteile, vor allem für Männer. Ein hoher Status gewährt exklusiven Zugang zu Ressourcen und korreliert mit männlichem Paarungserfolg (van Vugt & Tybur, 2016). So zeigen Studien, dass Männer ihre Mobiltelefone auffallend häufig zeigen, um damit ihren finanziellen und sozialen Status zu demonstrieren, mit dem Ziel potenzielle Partnerinnen auf sich aufmerksam zu machen und sich von Konkurrenten abzuheben (Lycett & Dunbar, 2000). Ähnliches legen auch Studien aus dem Bereich der evolutionären Konsumenten-psychologie nahe: Der Kauf und die Zurschaustellung von auffälligen Luxus-Produkten (inkl. Handys und Smartphones) scheint mit dem Interesse eines Mannes an einer kurzfristigen sexuellen Beziehung in Zusammenhang zu stehen und seinen Partnerwert insbesondere in diesem Kontext zu steigern (Hennighausen & Schwab, 2014; Saad, 2013; Sundie et al., 2011). Aufbauend auf diesen Befunden untersuchte die vorliegende Dissertation in drei experimentellen Studien, wie Männer und Frauen einen Mann, der als Besitzer eines ein auffälligen, statusträchtigen (vs. unauffälligen, wenig mit Status assoziierten) Smartphones präsentiert wurde, als potenziellen Partner und gleichgeschlechtlichen Konkurrenten wahrnahmen. Darüber hinaus wurde untersucht, wie männlicher Geltungskonsum von Smartphones mit zwei weiteren Faktoren, die den Partnerwert eines Mannes signalisieren, interagiert. Dazu wurden zusätzlich die Gesichtsattraktivität (Studie 1 und 2) sowie die soziale Dominanz (Studie 3) des Smartphone-Besitzers manipuliert. Studie 1 zeigte, dass Männer und Frauen den Besitzer eines auffälligen, statusträchtigen Smartphones als einen schlechteren Partner für eine feste Beziehung einschätzten und ihn als interessierter an unverbindlichen sexuellen Beziehungen wahrnahmen im Vergleich zu einem Mann, der als Besitzer eines unauffälligeren, nur wenig mit Status assoziierten Smartphones gezeigt wurde. Studie 2 replizierte diese Befunde und zeigte zudem, dass Männer und Frauen dem Besitzer eines auffälligen Smartphones eher Eigenschaften zuschrieben, die mit einer Kurzzeitpartnerschaft assoziiert sind (z.B. geringe Treue, erhöhte Flirtbereitschaft, schnelle Verfügbarkeit von Ressourcen). Darüber hinaus wurde der Besitzer eines auffälligen Smartphones als ein stärkerer Rivale, als eine größere Bedrohung für eine bestehende Beziehung sowie als ein schlechterer Freund wahrgenommen. Diese Effekte zeigten sich insbesondere dann, wenn der Besitzer des auffälligen Smartphones auch attraktiv war. In Studie 3 konnten die Effekte, die der Besitz eines auffälligen Smartphones auf die Einschätzung eines Mannes als romantischen Partner und gleichgeschlechtlichen Konkurrenten hat, zum Teil repliziert werden. In Studie 3 traten diese Effekte jedoch unabhängig von der sozialen Dominanz des Mannes auf. Insgesamt lassen die Ergebnisse dieser Dissertation vermuten, dass der Besitz eines auffälligen, statusträchtigen Smartphones einer Luxusmarke nicht nur proximate Funktionen (wie z.B. Anrufe empfangen und tätigen, Organisation), sondern auch ultimate Funktionen erfüllen könnte, die sich auf Paarung und Fortpflanzung erstreckt. Die Ergebnisse deuten an, dass Männer vom Besitz eines auffälligen, statusträchtigen Smartphones einer Luxusmarke eher im Kontext einer kurzen, unverbindlichen Beziehung als im Kontext einer festen Partnerschaft profitieren könnten. Darüber hinaus scheinen v.a. attraktivere Männer vom Besitz eines auffälligen Smartphones zu profitieren. Diese Befunde tragen zu einem besseren Verständnis bei, weshalb Männer auffällige, status-trächtige Smartphones von Luxusmarken kaufen und diese zur Schau stellen. Dabei gehen die in dieser Dissertation erlangten Befunde über bisherige Erkenntnisse der Medien- und Konsumentenpsychologie hinaus, welche vorranging proximate Ursachen für den Kauf und die Nutzung von Smartphones diskutiert haben. Durch die Anwendung einer evolutionären Perspektive veranschaulicht die vorliegende Arbeit die Leistung und den Nutzens dieses Forschungsparadigmas für medienpsychologische Forschung und zeigt auf, wie die Synthese einer proximaten und ultimaten Perspektive zu einem umfassenderen Verständnis des Phänomens Smartphone führt. KW - Verbraucher KW - Psychologie KW - Smartphone KW - Medien KW - conspicuous consumption KW - evolutionary psychology KW - media psychology KW - costly signaling KW - consumer psychology KW - mobile devices KW - Hennighausen KW - Evolutionspsychologie KW - Konsumentenpsychologie KW - Medienpsychologie Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-141049 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hurtienne, Jörn T1 - Inter-coder reliability of categorising force-dynamic events in human-technology interaction N2 - Two studies are reported that investigate how readily accessible and applicable ten force-dynamic categories are to novices in describing short episodes of human-technology interaction (Study 1) and that establish a measure of inter-coder reliability when re-classifying these episodes into force-dynamic categories (Study 2). The results of the first study show that people can easily and confidently relate their experiences with technology to the definitions of force-dynamic events (e.g. “The driver released the handbrake” as an example of restraint removal). The results of the second study show moderate agreement between four expert coders across all ten force-dynamic categories (Cohen’s kappa = .59) when re-classifying these episodes. Agreement values for single force-dynamic categories ranged between ‘fair’ and ‘almost perfect’, i.e. between kappa = .30 and .95. Agreement with the originally intended classifications of study 1 was higher than the pure inter-coder reliabilities. Single coders achieved an average kappa of .71, indicating substantial agreement. Using more than one coder increased kappas to almost perfect: up to .87 for four coders. A qualitative analysis of the predicted versus the observed number of category confusions revealed that about half of the category disagreement could be predicted from strong overlaps in the definitions of force-dynamic categories. From the quantitative and qualitative results, guidelines are derived to aid the better training of coders in order to increase inter-coder reliability. KW - inter-coder reliability KW - force dynamics KW - image schemas KW - humantechnology interaction Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-194127 SN - 2197-2796 SN - 2197-2788 N1 - This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively. VL - 1 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Knoll, Johannes A1 - Schramm, Holger T1 - Advertising in social network sites – Investigating the social influence of user-generated content on online advertising effects JF - Communications N2 - In today’s social online world there is a variety of interaction and participatory possibilities which enable web users to actively produce content themselves. This user-generated content is omnipresent in the web and there is growing evidence that it is used to select or evaluate professionally created online information. The present study investigated how this surrounding content affects online advertising by drawing from social influence theory. Specifically, it was assumed that web users sharing an interpersonal relationship (interpersonal influence) and/or a group membership (collective influence) with authors of user-generated content which appears next to advertising on the web page are more strongly influenced in their response to the advertising than unrelated users. These assumptions were tested in a 2 × 2 between-subject experiment with 118 students who were exposed to four different Facebook profiles that differed in terms of interpersonal connection to the source (existent/non-existent) and collective connection to the source (existent/non-existent). The results show a significant impact in the case of collective influence, but not in the case of interpersonal influence. The underlying mechanisms of this effect and implications of the results for online advertising are discussed. KW - online advertising KW - social network sites KW - social influence KW - user-generated content KW - advertising effects Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-194192 SN - 1613-4087 SN - 0341-2059 N1 - This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively. VL - 40 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Grundgeiger, T. A1 - Albert, M. A1 - Reinhardt, D. A1 - Happel, O. A1 - Steinisch, A. A1 - Wurmb, T. T1 - Real-time tablet-based resuscitation documentation by the team leader: evaluating documentation quality and clinical performance JF - Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine N2 - Background Precise and complete documentation of in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitations is important but data quality can be poor. In the present study, we investigated the effect of a tablet-based application for real-time resuscitation documentation used by the emergency team leader on documentation quality and clinical performance of the emergency team. Methods Senior anaesthesiologists either used the tablet-based application during the simulated resuscitation for documentation and also used the application for the final documentation or conducted the full documentation at the end of the scenario using the local hospital information system. The latter procedure represents the current local documentation method. All scenarios were video recorded. To assess the documentation, we compared the precision of intervention delivery times, documentation completeness, and final documentation time. To assess clinical performance, we compared adherence to guidelines for defibrillation and adrenaline administration, the no-flow fraction, and the time to first defibrillation. Results The results showed significant benefits for the tablet-based application compared to the hospital information system for precision of the intervention delivery times, the final documentation time, and the no-flow fraction. We observed no differences between the groups for documentation completeness, adherence to guidelines for defibrillation and adrenaline administration, and the time to first defibrillation. Discussion In the presented study, we observed that a tablet-based application can improve documentation data quality. Furthermore, we demonstrated that a well-designed application can be used in real-time by a member of the emergency team with possible beneficial effects on clinical performance. Conclusion The present evaluation confirms the advantage of tablet-based documentation tools and also shows that the application can be used by an active member of an emergency team without compromising clinical performance. KW - cardiac arrest documentation KW - cardiopulmonary resuscitation KW - simulation KW - no-flow fraction Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-146582 VL - 24 IS - 51 ER - TY - THES A1 - Oberdörfer, Sebastian T1 - Better Learning with Gaming: Knowledge Encoding and Knowledge Learning Using Gamification T1 - Besser Lernen durch Spielen: Wissensencodierung und Lernen von Wissen mit Gamification N2 - Computer games are highly immersive, engaging, and motivating learning environments. By providing a tutorial at the start of a new game, players learn the basics of the game's underlying principles as well as practice how to successfully play the game. During the actual gameplay, players repetitively apply this knowledge, thus improving it due to repetition. Computer games also challenge players with a constant stream of new challenges which increase in difficulty over time. As a result, computer games even require players to transfer their knowledge to master these new challenges. A computer game consists of several game mechanics. Game mechanics are the rules of a computer game and encode the game's underlying principles. They create the virtual environments, generate a game's challenges and allow players to interact with the game. Game mechanics also can encode real world knowledge. This knowledge may be acquired by players via gameplay. However, the actual process of knowledge encoding and knowledge learning using game mechanics has not been thoroughly defined, yet. This thesis therefore proposes a theoretical model to define the knowledge learning using game mechanics: the Gamified Knowledge Encoding. The model is applied to design a serious game for affine transformations, i.e., GEtiT, and to predict the learning outcome of playing a computer game that encodes orbital mechanics in its game mechanics, i.e., Kerbal Space Program. To assess the effects of different visualization technologies on the overall learning outcome, GEtiT visualizes the gameplay in desktop-3D and immersive virtual reality. The model's applicability for effective game design as well as GEtiT's overall design are evaluated in a usability study. The learning outcome of playing GEtiT and Kerbal Space Program is assessed in four additional user studies. The studies' results validate the use of the Gamified Knowledge Encoding for the purpose of developing effective serious games and to predict the learning outcome of existing serious games. GEtiT and Kerbal Space Program yield a similar training effect but a higher motivation to tackle the assignments in comparison to a traditional learning method. In conclusion, this thesis expands the understanding of using game mechanics for an effective learning of knowledge. The presented results are of high importance for researches, educators, and developers as they also provide guidelines for the development of effective serious games. N2 - Computerspiele stellen attraktive, spannende und motivierende Lernumgebungen dar. Spieler erlernen zu Spielbeginn die grundlegenden Spielregeln und wenden dieses Wissen während des Spielablaufs an. Dadurch wird das dem Spiel zu Grunde liegende Wissen durch Wiederholung geübt und verinnerlicht. Durch einen konstanten Fluss an neuen Herausforderungen, die in ihrer Schwierigkeit ansteigen, müssen Spieler das Wissen auf neue Szenarien übertragen. Innerhalb eines Computerspiels sind Spielmechaniken für eine Anwendung als auch Demonstration des Spielwissens verantwortlich. Die Spielmechaniken regeln den Spielablauf, in dem sie die Spieleraktionen definieren, die virtuelle Umgebung generieren und die Herausforderungen des Spiels festlegen. Das in den Spielmechaniken kodierte Wissen kann jedoch auch der realen Welt entstammen. In diesem Fall entwickeln Spieler Kompetenzen, die später auch in der Realität Anwendung finden können. Das Kodieren von Wissen in Spielmechaniken und der damit einhergehende Lernprozess wurde allerdings noch nicht genau theoretisch erfasst. Diese Dissertation versucht diese Forschungslücke zu schließen, indem ein theoretisches Model der Wissenskodierung in Spielmechaniken entworfen wird: das Gamified Knowledge Encoding. Dieses Model wird sowohl für das Design einer Lernanwendung für das Wissen der Affinen Transformationen, GEtiT, als auch zur Vorhersage von Lerneffekten eines Computerspiels, Kerbal Space Program, herangezogen. In einer Usability-Studie wird sowohl die Anwendbarkeit des Modells für ein effektives Spieldesign als auch das Gesamtdesign von GEtiT bewertet. Das Lernergebnis, das beim Spielen von GEtiT und Kerbal Space Program erzielt wird, wird in vier weiteren Nutzerstudien überprüft. Die Studien validieren den Einsatz des Gamified Knowledge Encoding Models zur Entwicklung von computerspielbasierten Lernumgebungen und die Vorhersage von Lerneffekten. GEtiT und Kerbal Space Program erzielen ein ähnliches Lernergebnis bei einer höheren Motivation im Vergleich zu einer traditionellen Lernmethode. Als Endergebnis erweitert das präsentierte Forschungsprojekt das generelle Verständnis über die Verwendung von Spielmechaniken für ein effektives Lernen. Die präsentierten Ergebnisse sind von großer Bedeutung für Forscher, Pädagogen und Entwickler, da sie auch Richtlinien für die Entwicklung effektiver Serious Games hervorbringen. KW - Serious game KW - Gamification KW - Lernen KW - Game mechanic KW - Spielmechanik KW - Knowledge encoding KW - Wissensencodierung KW - Virtuelle Realität Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-219707 ER - TY - CHAP ED - Schwab, Frank ED - Carolus, Astrid ED - Brill, Michael ED - Hennighausen, Christine T1 - Media Psychology - "Media Research: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow" Proceedings of the 8th Conference of the Media Psychology Division of the German Psychological Society T1 - Medienpsychologie - Tagungsband der 8. Tagung der Fachgruppe Medienpsychologie der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Psychologie N2 - The proceedings of the 8th Conference of the Media Psychology Division of the German Psychological Society hosted by the University of Wuerzburg from the 4th until the 6th of September 2013 contains the abstracts of the conference participants. Following the motto of the conference "Media Research: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow" a large number of media-psychological topics was dealt with. Amongst others, participants presented their research on interactive learning, emotions, virtual agents and avatars, gaming, scientific communication, politics, motion pictures and entertainment, social media, methods, and persuasions. N2 - Der Tagungsband enthält die Abstracts der 8. Tagung der Fachgruppe Medienpsychologie der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Psychologie, welche vom 04. bis 06. September 2013 durch die Universität Würzburg ausgerichtet wurde. Auf der Fachtagung mit dem Motto "Media Research: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow" wurde in zahlreichen Präsentationen und Postern ein breites Spektrum medienpsychologischer Fragestellungen abgedeckt. Unter anderen wurden die Themen interaktives Lernen, Emotionen, virtuelle Agenten und Avatare, Videospiele, Wissenschaftskommunikation, Politik, Film und Unterhaltung, Soziale Medien, Forschungsmethoden sowie Persuasion behandelt. KW - Deutsche Gesellschaft für Psychologie / Fachgruppe Medienpsychologie KW - Media Psychology Division KW - Medien KW - Medienpsychologie KW - Media Psychology KW - Psychologie Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-97403 SN - 978-3-923959-93-8 ER - TY - THES A1 - Reinhardt, Daniel T1 - IntuiBeat: Formative und summative Evaluation intuitiver Benutzung T1 - IntuiBeat: Formative and Summative Evaluation of Intuitive Use N2 - Intuitive Benutzung wird in dieser Arbeit definiert als das Ausmaß, mit dem ein Produkt mental effizient und effektiv genutzt wird, was mit einem starken metakognitiven Gefühl von Flüssigkeit einhergeht. Aktuelle Methoden verfügen nicht über eine ausreichend hohe zeitliche Anwendungseffizienz, um im Industrieprojekt 3D-GUIde effektiv zur Evaluation von Interaktionspatterns für 3D-Creation-Oriented-User-Interfaces (3D-CUIs) eingesetzt werden zu können. Diese Interaktionspatterns beschreiben strukturiert, wie 3D-CUIs als User Interfaces zur Erstellung von dreidimensionalen Inhalten gestaltet werden müssen, um intuitive Benutzung zu unterstützen. In dieser Arbeit werden daher zwei neue Evaluationsmethoden vorgeschlagen: 1) IntuiBeat-F als formative Evaluationsmethode und 2) IntuiBeat-S als summative Evaluationsmethode. Basierend auf Default-Interventionist-Theorien und bestehenden Definitionen intuitiver Benutzung werden die mentale Beanspruchung als zentrales objektives, das metakognitive Gefühl von Flüssigkeit als zentrales subjektives und die Effektivität als zentrales pragmatisches mit intuitiver Benutzung assoziiertes Merkmal identifiziert. Die Evaluation intuitiver Benutzung mithilfe von IntuiBeat-F und IntuiBeat-S ist vielversprechend, da es sich bei beiden Methoden um Inhibition basierende Rhythmuszweitaufgaben handelt und diese somit mentale Beanspruchung objektiv erfassen können. Das Potential beider Methoden wird im Hinblick auf vorherige Forschungsarbeiten zur zeitlich effizienten Evaluation von 3D-CUIs aus der Mensch-Computer-Interaktion und der Psychologie diskutiert. Aus dieser Diskussion werden empirische Forschungsfragen abgeleitet. Die erste Forschungsfrage untersucht die wissenschaftliche Güte von IntuiBeat-S. Im ersten, zweiten und dritten Experiment werden Paare von 3D-CUIs miteinander summativ verglichen (d.h. weniger vs. stärker intuitiv benutzbare User Interfaces). Dabei wird die wissenschaftliche Güte von IntuiBeat-S hinsichtlich der Hauptgütekriterien Objektivität, Reliabilität und Validität beurteilt. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass IntuiBeat-S eine hohe wissenschaftliche Güte bei der summativen Evaluation besitzt. Zudem macht es bei der Anwendung von IntuiBeat-S keinen Unterschied, ob der Rhythmus über die Ferse oder den Fußballen eingeben wird, und ob als Stichproben Studierende mit höherer oder geringerer Vorerfahrung bezüglich der Nutzung von 3D-CUIs verwendet werden. Die zweite Forschungsfrage untersucht die wissenschaftliche Güte von IntuiBeat-F. Im vierten, fünften, sechsten und siebten Experiment werden 3D-CUIs einzeln formativ evaluiert (d.h. entweder ein weniger oder stärker intuitiv benutzbares User Interface). Dabei wird die wissenschaftliche Güte von IntuiBeat-F hinsichtlich der Hauptgütekriterien Gründlichkeit, Gültigkeit und Zuverlässigkeit beurteilt. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass IntuiBeat-F eine hohe wissenschaftliche Güte bei der formativen Evaluation besitzt. Diese liegt bei strikter Anwendung der Methode (d.h. Berücksichtigung ausschließlich mit der Methode entdeckter Nutzungsprobleme) zwar höher, ist aber bei wenig strikter Anwendung der Methode (d.h. Berücksichtigung auch unabhängig von der Methode entdeckter Nutzungsprobleme) noch ausreichend hoch. Jedoch konnte erst die Entwicklung und Einführung einer zusätzlichen Analysesoftware im Zuge des sechsten und siebten Experiments die wissenschaftliche Güte von IntuiBeat-F hinsichtlich aller drei Hauptgütekriterien demonstrieren, da ohne deren Unterstützung IntuiBeat-F vom Evaluator nicht ausreichend gründlich angewendet wird. Die dritte Forschungsfrage untersucht, wie hoch die zeitliche Anwendungseffizienz beider Methoden als wichtiger Aspekt praktischer Güte im Vergleich zu bereits vorhandenen Evaluationsmethoden für intuitive Benutzung ist. Bezüglich der summativen Evaluation wird im zweiten Experiment eine höhere zeitliche Anwendungseffizienz von IntuiBeat-S im Vergleich zum aktuellen summativen Benchmark, der CHAI-Methode, sowohl bei der Evaluation von weniger als auch bei der von stärker intuitiv benutzbaren 3D-CUIs demonstriert. Auch bezüglich der formativen Evaluation konnten die Ergebnisse der letzten vier Experimente zeigen, dass die zeitliche Anwendungseffizienz von IntuiBeat-F im Vergleich zum aktuellen formativen Benchmark, dem Nutzertest mit retrospektivem Think-Aloud- Protokoll, sowohl bei der Evaluation von weniger als auch stärker intuitiv benutzbaren 3D-CUIs höher liegt. Dieser Unterschied bleibt bestehend, egal ob eine zusätzliche Analysesoftware vom Evaluator verwendet wird oder nicht. Als Ergebnis aller Experimente lässt sich feststellen, dass die wissenschaftliche Güte und die zeitliche Anwendungseffizienz beider Methoden zur Evaluation intuitiver Benutzung von 3D-CUIs mehr als zufriedenstellend beurteilt werden kann. Die Arbeit wird mit einer Diskussion des geleisteten Forschungsbeitrags geschlossen. Dabei werden Anregungen für künftige Forschung aus theoretischer (z.B. Berücksichtigung des Gefühls von Flüssigkeit bei der Evaluation), praktischer (z.B. Untersuchung der Anwendbarkeit beider Methoden in anderen Domänen) und methodischer (z.B. Beurteilung der praktischen Güte beider Methoden anhand anderer Kriterien) Perspektive gegeben. N2 - In this work, intuitive use is defined as the extent to which a product can be used in a mentally efficient and effective manner, which is accompanied by a strong metacognitive feeling of fluency. Currently available methods to measure intuitive use lack sufficiently high time efficiency to apply them effectively for evaluating interaction patterns for 3DCreation- Oriented-User-Interfaces (3D-CUIs) in the context of the industrial project 3DGUIde. These interaction patterns describe in a structured way how 3D-CUIs – user interfaces aimed to create three-dimensional content – should be designed to support intuitive use. This work therefore proposes two new evaluation methods for intuitive use: 1) IntuiBeat-F as a formative method and 2) IntuiBeat-S as a summative method. Based on default-interventionist theories and current definitions of intuitive, this work identifies mental efficiency as the central objective, the metacognitive feeling of fluency as the central subjective and the effectiveness as the central pragmatic attribute associated with intuitive use. The evaluation of intuitive use with IntuiBeat-F and IntuiBeat-S is promising since both methods are inhibition-based rhythm secondary tasks, and can therefore assess mental efficiency objectively. Their potential for a time efficient evaluation of 3D-CUIs is discussed in the light of existing research in human-computer interaction and psychology and empirical research questions are derived from this discussion. The first research question examines the scientific quality of IntuiBeat-S. In the first, the second and the third experiment pairs of 3D-CUIs are compared in a summative manner (i.e., less intuitive vs. more intuitive user interfaces) and the scientific quality of IntuiBeat- S is assessed with regard to the scientific criteria objectivity, reliability and validity. The results show that IntuiBeat-S has a high scientific quality. Moreover, it makes no difference whether the rhythm is entered via the heel or the ball of the foot and whether the tested undergraduate students are more or less experienced in dealing with 3D-CUIs. The second research question examines the scientific quality of IntuiBeat-F. In the fourth, the fifth, the sixth and the seventh experiment 3D-CUIs are evaluated individually in a formative manner (i.e., either a less intuitive or more intuitive user interface) and the scientific quality of IntuiBeat-F is assessed with regard to the scientific criteria thoroughness, validity and reliability. The results show that IntuiBeat-F has a high scientific quality. The scientific quality of IntuiBeat-F is higher when strictly applied (i.e., considering usability problems solely found with the method), but it is already high when applied less strictly (i.e., considering further usability problems found regardless of the method). However, only the development and use of an additional analysis software in the sixth and the seventh experiment show the scientific quality of IntuiBeat-F as a formative evaluation method for intuitive use with regard to all three scientific criteria. Without the software support, IntuiBeat-F is not applied thoroughly by the evaluator. The third research question examines the practical quality of both methods in terms of application time efficiency when compared to existing evaluation methods for intuitive use. Regarding the summative evaluation, the second experiment demonstrates a higher application time efficiency of IntuiBeat-S in comparison to the current summative benchmark, the CHAI method, when evaluating both less and more intuitive 3D-CUIs. With regard to the formative evaluation, the last four experiments show a higher application time efficiency of IntuiBeat-F in comparison to the current formative benchmark, the user test with retrospective think-aloud protocol, when evaluating both less and more intuitive 3D-CUIs, irrespective of whether or not an additional analysis software is used. As a result of these studies it can be concluded that the scientific quality and the application time efficiency of both methods for the evaluation of intuitive use in the context of 3D-CUIs can be considered satisfactory. This work closes with a discussion of the accomplished research contribution and suggestions for future research from a theoretical (e.g., consideration of the feeling of fluency during the evaluation), a practical (e.g., applicability of both methods in other domains) and a methodological perspective (e.g., assessment of the practical quality of both methods using other criteria). KW - Mensch-Maschine-Kommunikation KW - Mensch-Maschine Interaktion KW - Evaluationsmethode KW - Intuitive Benutzung KW - Human-Computer Interaction KW - Intuitive Use KW - Evaluation Method KW - Evaluation Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-217599 ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Förster, Kristina A1 - Hein, Rebecca A1 - Grafe, Silke A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich A1 - Wienrich, Carolin ED - Basteans, Theo T1 - Fostering Intercultural Competencies in Initial Teacher Education: Implementation of Educational Design Prototypes Using a Social Virtual Reality Environment T2 - Proceedings of Innovate Learning Summit N2 - The combination of globalization and digitalization emphasizes the importance of media-related and intercultural competencies of teacher educators and preservice teachers. This article reports on the initial prototypical implementation of a pedagogical concept to foster such competencies of preservice teachers. The proposed pedagogical concept utilizes a social virtual reality (VR) framework since related work on the characteristics of VR has indicated that this medium is particularly well suited for intercultural professional development processes. The development is integrated into a larger design-based research approach that develops a theory-guided and empirically grounded professional development concept for teacher educators with a special focus on teacher educator technology competencies (TETC8). TETCs provide a suitable competence framework capable of aligning requirements for both media-related and intercultural competencies. In an exploratory study with student teachers, we designed, implemented, and evaluated a pedagogical concept. Reflection reports were qualitatively analyzed to gain insights into factors that facilitate or hinder the implementation of the immersive learning scenario as well as into the participants’ evaluation of their learning experience. The results show that our proposed pedagogical concept is particularly suitable for promoting the experience of social presence, agency, and empathy in the group. KW - Interkulturelles Lernen KW - Lehrerbildung KW - Virtuelle Realität KW - Medienkompetenz KW - International Comparative Research KW - TETCs Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-260586 UR - https://www.learntechlib.org/primary/p/220276/ ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hutmacher, Fabian A1 - Schläger, Linus A1 - Meerson, Rinat T1 - Autobiographical memory in the digital age: Insights based on the subjective reports of users of smart journaling apps JF - Applied Cognitive Psychology N2 - Humans have long used external memory aids to support remembering. However, modern digital technologies could facilitate recording and remembering personal information in an unprecedented manner. The present research sought to understand the potential impact of these technologies on autobiographical memory based on interviews with users of smart journaling apps. In Study 1 (N = 12), participants who had no prior experience with smart journaling apps tested the app Day One for 2 weeks and were interviewed about their subjective perceptions afterwards. In order to cross-validate the obtained findings, Study 2 (N = 4) was based on in-depth interviews with long-time users of different smart journaling apps. Taken together, the two studies provide insights into the way autobiographical remembering may change in the digital age – but also into the opportunities and risks potentially associated with the use of technologies that allow creating a detailed and multimedia-based record of one's life. KW - autobiographical memory KW - total recall KW - smart journaling KW - digital age KW - new media Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-318620 SN - 0888-4080 VL - 37 IS - 4 SP - 686 EP - 698 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hutmacher, Fabian A1 - Morgenroth, Karolina T1 - The beginning of the life story: The meaning of the earliest autobiographical memory from an adult perspective JF - Applied Cognitive Psychology N2 - Earliest autobiographical memories mark a potential beginning of our life story. However, their meaning has hardly been investigated. Against this background, participants (N = 182) were asked to think about two kinds of meaning: the meaning that the remembered event might have had in the moment of experience and the meaning that the memory of the event has for their present life situation. With respect to the meaning in the moment of experience, participants most frequently referred to situational characteristics. The meaning for the present life situation was most frequently related to aspects of the memory that told something about the person beyond the immediate context of the remembered event. Moreover, these meanings were more frequently associated with continuity than with a contrast between then and now. Apart from these overarching commonalities, our data also show that the earliest autobiographical memories of different people can tell very different stories. KW - earliest autobiographical memories KW - meaning-making KW - early memory KW - autobiographical memory KW - life story Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-318610 SN - 0888-4080 VL - 36 IS - 3 SP - 612 EP - 622 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Carolus, Astrid A1 - Wienrich, Carolin A1 - Törke, Anna A1 - Friedel, Tobias A1 - Schwietering, Christian A1 - Sperzel, Mareike T1 - ‘Alexa, I feel for you!’ Observers’ empathetic reactions towards a conversational agent JF - Frontiers in Computer Science N2 - Conversational agents and smart speakers have grown in popularity offering a variety of options for use, which are available through intuitive speech operation. In contrast to the standard dyad of a single user and a device, voice-controlled operations can be observed by further attendees resulting in new, more social usage scenarios. Referring to the concept of ‘media equation’ and to research on the idea of ‘computers as social actors,’ which describes the potential of technology to trigger emotional reactions in users, this paper asks for the capacity of smart speakers to elicit empathy in observers of interactions. In a 2 × 2 online experiment, 140 participants watched a video of a man talking to an Amazon Echo either rudely or neutrally (factor 1), addressing it as ‘Alexa’ or ‘Computer’ (factor 2). Controlling for participants’ trait empathy, the rude treatment results in participants’ significantly higher ratings of empathy with the device, compared to the neutral treatment. The form of address had no significant effect. Results were independent of the participants’ gender and usage experience indicating a rather universal effect, which confirms the basic idea of the media equation. Implications for users, developers and researchers were discussed in the light of (future) omnipresent voice-based technology interaction scenarios. KW - conversational agent KW - empathy KW - smart speaker KW - media equation KW - computers as social actors KW - human-computer interaction Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-258807 VL - 3 ER - TY - THES A1 - Tscharn, Robert T1 - Innovative And Age-Inclusive Interaction Design with Image-Schematic Metaphors T1 - Innovatives und Alters-Inklusives Interaktionsdesign mit Image-Schematischen Metaphern N2 - The field of human-computer interaction (HCI) strives for innovative user interfaces. Innovative and novel user interfaces are a challenge for a growing population of older users and endanger older adults to be excluded from an increasingly digital world. This is because older adults often have lower cognitive abilities and little prior experiences with technology. This thesis aims at resolving the tension between innovation and age-inclusiveness by developing user interfaces that can be used regardless of cognitive abilities and technology-dependent prior knowledge. The method of image-schematic metaphors holds promises for innovative and age-inclusive interaction design. Image-schematic metaphors represent a form of technology-independent prior knowledge. They reveal basic mental models and can be gathered in language (e.g. bank account is container from "I put money into my bank account"). Based on a discussion of previous applications of image-schematic metaphors in HCI, the present work derives three empirical research questions regarding image-schematic metaphors for innovative and age-inclusive interaction design. The first research question addresses the yet untested assumption that younger and older adults overlap in their technology-independent prior knowledge and, therefore, their usage of image-schematic metaphors. In study 1, a total of 41 participants described abstract concepts from the domains of online banking and everyday life. In study 2, ten contextual interviews were conducted. In both studies, younger and older adults showed a substantial overlap of 70% to 75%, indicating that also their mental models overlap substantially. The second research question addresses the applicability and potential of image-schematic metaphors for innovative design from the perspective of designers. In study 3, 18 student design teams completed an ideation process with either an affinity diagram as the industry standard, image-schematic metaphors or both methods in combination and created paper prototypes. The image-schematic metaphor method alone, but not the combination of both methods, was readily adopted and applied just as a well as the more familiar standard method. In study 4, professional interaction designers created prototypes either with or without image-schematic metaphors. In both studies, the method of image-schematic metaphors was perceived as applicable and creativity stimulating. The third research question addresses whether designs that explicitly follow image-schematic metaphors are more innovative and age-inclusive regarding differences in cognitive abilities and prior technological knowledge. In two experimental studies (study 5 and 6) involving a total of 54 younger and 53 older adults, prototypes that were designed with image-schematic metaphors were perceived as more innovative compared to those who were designed without image-schematic metaphors. Moreover, the impact of prior technological knowledge on interaction was reduced for prototypes that had been designed with image-schematic metaphors. However, participants' cognitive abilities and age still influenced the interaction significantly. The present work provides empirical as well as methodological findings that can help to promote the method of image-schematic metaphors in interaction design. As a result of these studies it can be concluded that the image-schematic metaphors are an applicable and effective method for innovative user interfaces that can be used regardless of prior technological knowledge. N2 - Innovative Benutzungsoberflächen sind eines der Hauptziele der Mensch-Computer Interaktion. Diese neuartigen Benutzungsoberflächen sind eine Herausforderung gerade für ältere Benutzer und drohen diese aus der immer digitaleren Welt auszuschließen. Hierbei spielen abnehmende kognitive Fähigkeiten und eine geringere Vorerfahrung mit Technologie eine wichtige Rolle. Diese Arbeit zielt darauf ab, die Spannung zwischen Innovation und Alters-Inklusivität zu verringern und Benutzungsoberflächen zu entwickeln, die unabhängig von kognitiven Fähigkeiten und technologieabhängigem Vorwissen benutzt werden können. Die Methode der image-schematischen Metaphern verspricht innovative und zugleich alters-inklusives Interaktionsdesign. Image-schematische Metaphern stellen eine technologieunabhängige Form von Vorwissen dar. Sie offenbaren grundlegende mentale Modelle und können aus metaphorischer Sprache extrahiert werden (z.B. Bankkonto ist Container ausgehend von "Geld ein}zahlen). Die vorliegende Arbeit leitet aus vorangegangen Anwendung von image-schematischen Metaphern im Bereich der Mensch-Computer Interaktion drei empirische Forschungsfragen mit dem Fokus auf innovatives und alters-inklusives Interaktionsdesign ab. Die erste Forschungsfrage behandelt die bisher ungetestete Annahme, dass junge und ältere Menschen in ihrem technologieunabhängigem Vorwissen und damit auch im Gebrauch image-schematischer Metaphern übereinstimmen. In Studie 1 beschrieben 41 Probanden abstrakte Konzepte in den Bereichen Online Banking und Alltag. In Studie 2 wurden zehn kontextuelle Interviews durchgeführt. In beiden Studien wurde eine Übereinstimmung zwischen 70% und 75% gefunden, was auf eine substantielle Übereinstimmung der mentalen Modelle hinweist. Die zweite Forschungsfrage zielte auf die Anwendbarkeit und das Potential image-schematischer Metaphern für innovatives Design aus der Perspektive von Designern ab. In Studie 3 durchliefen 18 studentische Designteams einen Ideenfindungsprozess mit Prototypenerstellung, der entweder auf einem Affinity Diagramm als Industriestandard, image-schematischen Metaphern oder beiden Ansätzen in Kombination basierte. Die Methode der image-schematischen Metaphern, aber nicht die Kombination beider Methoden, war ebenso leicht anwendbar wie die bekanntere Standardmethode. In Studie 4 erstellten professionelle Interaktionsdesigner Prototypen mit oder ohne image-schematische Metaphern. In beiden Studien wurde die neue Methode als leicht anwendbar und die Kreativität stimulierend wahrgenommen. Die dritte Forschungsfrage ging der Frage nach, ob Prototypen, die explizit auf image-schematischen Metaphern basieren, tatsächlich innovativer wahrgenommen werden und alters-inklusiver bezüglich kognitiver Fähigkeiten und Technologievorwissen sind. In zwei experimentellen Studien (Studie 5 und 6) mit insgesamt 54 jüngeren und 53 älteren Menschen wurden Prototypen, die mit image-schematischen Metaphern entwickelt worden waren, als innovativer wahrgenommen als solche, die nicht explizit mit der neuen Methode entwickelt worden waren. Zudem war der Einfluss von Technologievorwissen auf die Interaktion geringer für Prototypen, die mit image-schematischen Metaphern erstellt worden waren. Der Einfluss von kognitiven Fähigkeiten und Alter auf die Interaktion blieb jedoch signifikant. Die vorliegende Arbeit liefert sowohl in empirischer als auch methodischer Hinsicht einen Beitrag zur Weiterentwicklung der Methode der image-schematischen Metaphern im Interaktionsdesign. Als Ergebnis dieser Arbeit lässt sich festhalten, dass image-schematische Metaphern eine leicht anwendbare und effektive Methode darstellen, um innovative Benutzungsoberflächen zu entwickeln, die unabhängig von Technologievorwissen benutzt werden können. KW - Mensch-Maschine-Kommunikation KW - Innovation KW - Human-Computer Interaction KW - Innovation KW - Experimental Studies KW - Interaction Design KW - Methodology KW - Benutzeroberfläche Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-175762 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Döllinger, Nina A1 - Wienrich, Carolin A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich T1 - Challenges and opportunities of immersive technologies for mindfulness meditation: a systematic review JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - Mindfulness is considered an important factor of an individual's subjective well-being. Consequently, Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) has investigated approaches that strengthen mindfulness, i.e., by inventing multimedia technologies to support mindfulness meditation. These approaches often use smartphones, tablets, or consumer-grade desktop systems to allow everyday usage in users' private lives or in the scope of organized therapies. Virtual, Augmented, and Mixed Reality (VR, AR, MR; in short: XR) significantly extend the design space for such approaches. XR covers a wide range of potential sensory stimulation, perceptive and cognitive manipulations, content presentation, interaction, and agency. These facilities are linked to typical XR-specific perceptions that are conceptually closely related to mindfulness research, such as (virtual) presence and (virtual) embodiment. However, a successful exploitation of XR that strengthens mindfulness requires a systematic analysis of the potential interrelation and influencing mechanisms between XR technology, its properties, factors, and phenomena and existing models and theories of the construct of mindfulness. This article reports such a systematic analysis of XR-related research from HCI and life sciences to determine the extent to which existing research frameworks on HCI and mindfulness can be applied to XR technologies, the potential of XR technologies to support mindfulness, and open research gaps. Fifty papers of ACM Digital Library and National Institutes of Health's National Library of Medicine (PubMed) with and without empirical efficacy evaluation were included in our analysis. The results reveal that at the current time, empirical research on XR-based mindfulness support mainly focuses on therapy and therapeutic outcomes. Furthermore, most of the currently investigated XR-supported mindfulness interactions are limited to vocally guided meditations within nature-inspired virtual environments. While an analysis of empirical research on those systems did not reveal differences in mindfulness compared to non-mediated mindfulness practices, various design proposals illustrate that XR has the potential to provide interactive and body-based innovations for mindfulness practice. We propose a structured approach for future work to specify and further explore the potential of XR as mindfulness-support. The resulting framework provides design guidelines for XR-based mindfulness support based on the elements and psychological mechanisms of XR interactions. KW - virtual reality KW - augmented reality KW - mindfulness KW - XR KW - meditation Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-259047 VL - 2 ER - TY - THES A1 - Löffler, Diana T1 - Color, Metaphor and Culture - Empirical Foundations for User Interface Design T1 - Farbe, Metapher und Kultur - Empirische Grundlagen für die Gestaltung von Benutzeroberflächen N2 - Using color in user interface design is both art and science. Often, designers focus on aesthetic properties of color, but neglect that it also carries meaning and entails profound psychological consequences. Color psychology, filling this gap, is in its infancy, and lacks a theoretical approach that predicts and explains color-meaning associations shared by a large group of people in a large variety of contexts. To amend this situation, this work develops Conceptual Metaphor Theory of Color (CMToC), which predicts and explains cross-cultural and experience-based semantic color associations. The theory is based on the idea from cognitive linguistics that the study of metaphorical language provides valuable insights into our mental models involving color. A discussion of three types of metaphors that cover associations with physical and abstract concepts in light of existing empirical evidence provides the basis for deriving empirical research questions. The first research question addresses the use of color for conveying physical information like weight in user interfaces. The results of four online surveys involving a total of 295 German and Japanese participants show the relative impact of hue, saturation and brightness for associations with 16 physical properties. Two thirds of these color associations were correctly predicted by CMToC. Participants frequently matched physical properties to colors based on sensorimotor correspondences and participants of both cultures did not considerably vary in their performance. The second research question addresses the use of color for conveying abstract information like importance in user interfaces. In one experimental study, a total of 75 German and Japanese participants validated color-to-abstract mappings in form of color population stereotypes like important is dark. The majority of these color associations (86%) were correctly predicted by CMToC. Again, participants of both cultures did not considerably vary in their performance. The third research question addresses whether predicted color associations with physical and abstract information are processed automatically as a precondition for intuitive use. The results of three studies involving a total of 85 German and Japanese participants show on the example of temperature that color automatically influences the identification speed of related physical properties, but not vice versa. Color and abstract information were not automatically associated. As a result of these studies it can be concluded that predictions of CMToC are cross-culturally valid for user interface design. Derived implicit associations with physical properties and explicit associations with abstract concepts can inform design decisions in both hard- and software user interface design. N2 - Der Einsatz von Farbe im User Interface Design ist sowohl Kunst als auch Wissenschaft. Designer legen häufig ästhetische Aspekte der Farbgestaltung in den Fokus, aber vernachlässigen dabei, dass Farbe ein wichtiger Bedeutungsträger ist, der tiefgreifende psychologische Konsequenzen mit sich bringt. Die Farbpsychologie versucht diese Lücke zu füllen, steckt jedoch noch in den Kinderschuhen. Vor allem mangelt es an einem theoretischen Ansatz, der semantische Farbassoziationen vorhersagt und erklärt, die von einer Vielzahl von Menschen in einer Vielzahl von Kontexten geteilt werden. Vor diesem Hintergrund wird in dieser Arbeit die Conceptual Metaphor Theory of Color (CMToC) entwickelt, welche Vorhersagen über kulturübergreifende und erfahrungsbasierte semantische Farbassoziationen trifft und diese unter Berücksichtigung von empirischen Daten erklärt. Die Theorie beruht auf der Idee aus der kognitiven Linguistik, dass die metaphorische Sprache wertvolle Einblicke in unsere mentalen Modelle in Bezug auf Farbe liefert. Aus der Diskussion dreier Arten von konzeptuellen Metaphern, die Farbassoziationen mit physischen und abstrakten Konzepten abdecken, werden schließlich empirische Forschungsfragen abgeleitet. Die erste Forschungsfrage befasst sich mit der Verwendung von Farbe zur Vermittlung von physischen Informationen wie Gewicht im User Interface. Die Ergebnisse von vier Online-Befragungen mit insgesamt 295 deutschen und japanischen Teilnehmern ermitteln den Einfluss von Farbton, Sättigung und Helligkeit auf Assoziationen mit 16 physischen Eigenschaften. Zwei Drittel dieser Farbassoziationen werden von der CMToC korrekt vorhergesagt. Die Teilnehmer aus beiden Kulturen unterschieden sich dabei nicht wesentlich in ihrer Zuordnung von Farben zu physischen Eigenschaften. Die zweite Forschungsfrage befasst sich mit der Verwendung von Farbe zur Vermittlung von abstrakten Informationen wie Wichtigkeit im User Interface. Eine experimentelle Studie mit insgesamt 75 deutschen und japanischen Teilnehmern validiert hierzu Assoziationen zwischen Farben und abstrakten Konzepten in Form von Farb-Populationsstereotypen wie wichtig ist dunkel. Die Mehrheit dieser Farbassoziationen (86%) wird von der CMToC korrekt vorhergesagt. Auch hier unterscheiden sich die Teilnehmer aus beiden Kulturen nicht wesentlich in ihrer Zuordnung von Farben zu abstrakten Konzepten. Die dritte Forschungsfrage befasst sich mit der Automatizität der vorhergesagten Farbassoziationen mit physischen und abstrakten Informationen als eine Voraussetzung für intuitive Benutzung. Die Ergebnisse von drei Studien mit insgesamt 85 deutschen und japanischen Teilnehmern zeigen am Beispiel Temperatur, dass Farbe automatisch die Identifikationsgeschwindigkeit verwandter physischer Eigenschaften beeinflusst, aber nicht umgekehrt. Farbe und abstrakte Informationen werden nicht automatisch assoziiert. Als Ergebnis dieser Studien lässt sich feststellen, dass die Vorhersagen von CMToC kulturübergreifend gültig sind. Abgeleitete implizite Farbassoziationen mit physischen Eigenschaften und explizite Farbassoziationen mit abstrakten Konzepten erlauben es, empirisch fundierte Designentscheidungen zu treffen, die bei der Gestaltung von Hard- und Software nutzbringend eingesetzt werden können. KW - Softwareergonomie KW - Benutzeroberfläche KW - Farbenpsychologie KW - user interface design KW - color psychology KW - human-machine interaction KW - conceptual metaphor theory KW - cross-cultural study KW - Mensch-Maschine Interaktion KW - Schnittstellengestaltung KW - Gestaltungsrichtlinien KW - Kulturvergleich Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-153782 ER - TY - THES A1 - Huber, Stephan T1 - Proxemo: Documenting Observed Emotions in HCI T1 - Proxemo: Die Dokumentation Beobachteter Emotionen in der Mensch-Computer-Interaktion N2 - For formative evaluations of user experience (UX) a variety of methods have been developed over the years. However, most techniques require the users to interact with the study as a secondary task. This active involvement in the evaluation is not inclusive of all users and potentially biases the experience currently being studied. Yet there is a lack of methods for situations in which the user has no spare cognitive resources. This condition occurs when 1) users' cognitive abilities are impaired (e.g., people with dementia) or 2) users are confronted with very demanding tasks (e.g., air traffic controllers). In this work we focus on emotions as a key component of UX and propose the new structured observation method Proxemo for formative UX evaluations. Proxemo allows qualified observers to document users' emotions by proxy in real time and then directly link them to triggers. Technically this is achieved by synchronising the timestamps of emotions documented by observers with a video recording of the interaction. In order to facilitate the documentation of observed emotions in highly diverse contexts we conceptualise and implement two separate versions of a documentation aid named Proxemo App. For formative UX evaluations of technology-supported reminiscence sessions with people with dementia, we create a smartwatch app to discreetly document emotions from the categories anger, general alertness, pleasure, wistfulness and pride. For formative UX evaluations of prototypical user interfaces with air traffic controllers we create a smartphone app to efficiently document emotions from the categories anger, boredom, surprise, stress and pride. Descriptive case studies in both application domains indicate the feasibility and utility of the method Proxemo and the appropriateness of the respectively adapted design of the Proxemo App. The third part of this work is a series of meta-evaluation studies to determine quality criteria of Proxemo. We evaluate Proxemo regarding its reliability, validity, thoroughness and effectiveness, and compare Proxemo's efficiency and the observers' experience to documentation with pen and paper. Proxemo is reliable, as well as more efficient, thorough and effective than handwritten notes and provides a better UX to observers. Proxemo compares well with existing methods where benchmarks are available. With Proxemo we contribute a validated structured observation method that has shown to meet requirements formative UX evaluations in the extreme contexts of users with cognitive impairments or high task demands. Proxemo is agnostic regarding researchers' theoretical approaches and unites reductionist and holistic perspectives within one method. Future work should explore the applicability of Proxemo for further domains and extend the list of audited quality criteria to include, for instance, downstream utility. With respect to basic research we strive to better understand the sources leading observers to empathic judgments and propose reminisce and older adults as model environment for investigating mixed emotions. N2 - Für formative Evaluationen der User Experience (UX) wurden im Laufe der Jahre zahlreiche Methoden entwickelt. Die meisten Methoden erfordern jedoch, dass die Benutzer als Nebenaufgabe mit der Studie interagieren. Diese aktive Beteiligung an der Evaluation kann das untersuchte Erlebnis verfälschen und schließt Benutzer komplett aus, die keine kognitiven Ressourcen zur Verfügung haben. Dies ist der Fall, wenn 1) die kognitiven Fähigkeiten der Benutzer beeinträchtigt sind (z. B. Menschen mit Demenz) oder 2) Benutzer mit sehr anspruchsvollen Aufgaben konfrontiert sind (z. B. Fluglotsen). In dieser Arbeit konzentrieren wir uns auf Emotionen als eine Schlüsselkomponente von UX und schlagen die neue strukturierte Beobachtungsmethode Proxemo für formative UX-Evaluationen vor. Proxemo ermöglicht es qualifizierten Beobachtern, die Emotionen der Nutzer in Echtzeit zu dokumentieren und sie direkt mit Auslösern zu verknüpfen. Technisch wird dies erreicht, indem die Zeitstempel der von den Beobachtern dokumentierten Emotionen mit einer Videoaufzeichnung der Interaktion synchronisiert werden. Um die Dokumentation von beobachteten Emotionen in sehr unterschiedlichen Kontexten zu erleichtern, konzipieren und implementieren wir zwei verschiedene Versionen einer Dokumentationshilfe namens Proxemo App. Für formative UX-Evaluationen von technologiegestützten Erinnerungssitzungen mit Menschen mit Demenz erstellen wir eine Smartwatch-App zur unauffälligen Dokumentation von Emotionen aus den Kategorien Ärger, allgemeine Wachsamkeit, Freude, Wehmut und Stolz. Für formative UX-Evaluationen prototypischer Nutzerschnittstellen mit Fluglotsen erstellen wir eine Smartphone-App zur effizienten Dokumentation von Emotionen aus den Kategorien Ärger, Langeweile, Überraschung, Stress und Stolz. Deskriptive Fallstudien in beiden Anwendungsfeldern zeigen die Machbarkeit und den Nutzen der Methode Proxemo und die Angemessenheit des jeweiligen Designs der Proxemo App. Der dritte Teil dieser Arbeit besteht aus einer Reihe von Meta-Evaluationsstudien zu den Gütekriterien von Proxemo. Wir evaluieren Proxemo hinsichtlich der Reliabilität, Validität, Gründlichkeit und Effektivität, und vergleichen die Effizienz von Proxemo und die UX der Beobachter mit der Dokumentation mit Stift und Papier. Proxemo ist reliabel, sowie effizienter, gründlicher und effektiver als handschriftliche Notizen und bietet den Beobachtern eine bessere UX. Proxemo schneidet gut ab im Vergleich zu bestehenden Methoden, für die Benchmarks verfügbar sind. Mit Proxemo stellen wir eine validierte, strukturierte Beobachtungsmethode vor, die nachweislich den Anforderungen formativer UX Evaluationen in den extremen Kontexten von Benutzern mit kognitiven Beeinträchtigungen oder hohen Aufgabenanforderungen gerecht wird. Proxemo ist agnostisch bezüglich der theoretischen Ansätze von Forschenden und vereint reduktionistische und ganzheitliche Perspektiven in einer Methode. Zukünftige Arbeiten sollten die Anwendbarkeit von Proxemo für weitere Domänen erkunden und die Liste der geprüften Gütekriterien erweitern, zum Beispiel um das Kriterium Downstream Utility. In Bezug auf die Grundlagenforschung werden wir versuchen, die Quellen besser zu verstehen, auf denen die empathischen Urteile der Beobachter fußen und schlagen Erinnerungen und ältere Erwachsene als Modellumgebung für die künftige Erforschung gemischter Emotionen vor. KW - Gefühl KW - Wissenschaftliche Beobachtung KW - Methode KW - Benutzererlebnis KW - Benutzerforschung KW - Emotionserkennung KW - Emotion inference KW - Emotionsinterpretation Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-305730 ER - TY - THES A1 - Sonnenberg, Christoph T1 - Analyzing Technology-Enhanced Learning Processes: What Can Process Mining Techniques Contribute to the Evaluation of Instructional Support? T1 - Eine Analyse technologieunterstützter Lernprozesse: Welchen Beitrag kann Process Mining für die Bewertung instruktionaler Hilfe leisten? N2 - The current dissertation addresses the analysis of technology-enhanced learning processes by using Process Mining techniques. For this purpose, students’ coded think-aloud data served as the measurement of the learning process, in order to assess the potential of this analysis method for evaluating the impact of instructional support. The increasing use of digital media in higher education and further educational sectors enables new potentials. However, it also poses new challenges to students, especially regarding the self-regulation of their learning process. To help students with optimally making progress towards their learning goals, instructional support is provided during learning. Besides the use of questionnaires and tests for the assessment of learning, researchers make use increasingly of process data to evaluate the effects of provided support. The analysis of observed behavioral traces while learning (e.g., log files, eye movements, verbal reports) allows detailed insights into the student’s activities as well as the impact of interventions on the learning process. However, new analytical challenges emerge, especially when going beyond the analysis of pure frequencies of observed events. For example, the question how to deal with temporal dynamics and sequences of learning activities arises. Against this background, the current dissertation concentrates on the application of Process Mining techniques for the detailed analysis of learning processes. In particular, the focus is on the additional value of this approach in comparison to a frequency-based analysis, and therefore on the potential of Process Mining for the evaluation of instructional support. An extensive laboratory study with 70 university students, which was conducted to investigate the impact of a support measure, served as the basis for pursuing the research agenda of this dissertation. Metacognitive prompts supported students in the experimental group (n = 35) during a 40-minute hypermedia learning session; whereas the control group (n = 35) received no support. Approximately three weeks later, all students participated in another learning session; however, this time all students learned without any help. The participants were instructed to verbalize their learning activities concurrently while learning. In the three analyses of this dissertation, the coded think aloud data were examined in detail by using frequency-based methods as well as Process Mining techniques. The first analysis addressed the comparison of the learning activities between the experimental and control groups during the first learning session. This study concentrated on the research questions whether metacognitive prompting increases the number of metacognitive learning activities, whether a higher number of these learning activities corresponds with learning outcome (mediation), and which differences regarding the sequential structure of learning activities can be revealed. The second analysis investigated the impact of the individual prompts as well as the conditions of their effectiveness on the micro level. In addition to Process Mining, we used a data mining approach to compare the findings of both analysis methods. More specifically, we classified the prompts by their effectiveness, and we examined the learning activities preceding and following the presentation of instructional support. Finally, the third analysis considered the long-term effects of metacognitive prompting on the learning process during another learning session without support. It was the key objective of this study to examine which fostered learning activities and process patterns remained stable during the second learning session. Overall, all three analyses indicated the additional value of Process Mining in comparison to a frequency-based analysis. Especially when conceptualizing the learning process as a dynamic sequence of multiple activities, Process Mining allows identifying regulatory loops and crucial routing points of the process. These findings might contribute to optimizing intervention strategies. However, before drawing conclusions for the design of instructional support based on the revealed process patterns, additional analyses need to investigate the generalizability of results. Moreover, the application of Process Mining remains challenging because guidelines for analytical decisions and parameter settings in technology-enhanced learning context are currently missing. Therefore, future studies need to examine further the potential of Process Mining as well as related analysis methods to provide researchers with concrete recommendations for use. Nevertheless, the application of Process Mining techniques can already contribute to advance the understanding of the impact of instructional support through the use of fine-grained process data. N2 - Die vorliegende Dissertation beschäftigt sich mit der Analyse technologieunterstützter Lernprozesse unter Verwendung von Process Mining Methoden. Dabei werden kodierte Protokolle des lauten Denkens als Prozessmaß genutzt, um eine Bewertung des Potentials dieses Analyseansatzes für die Evaluation der Effekte instruktionaler Hilfe vornehmen zu können. Die zunehmende Verbreitung digitaler Medien in der Hochschulbildung und weiteren Ausbildungssektoren schafft neue Potentiale, allerdings auch neue Anforderungen an den Lerner, insbesondere an die Regulation seines Lernprozesses. Um ihn dabei zu unterstützen seinen Lernfortschritt optimal zu gestalten, wird ihm während des Lernens instruktionale Hilfe angeboten. Neben der Evaluation mittels Fragebögen und Testverfahren wird die Wirksamkeit der angebotenen Unterstützung zunehmend durch Prozessdaten bewertet. Die Analyse von beobachteten Verhaltensspuren während des Lernens (z.B. Logfiles, Blickbewegungen, Verbalprotokolle) ermöglicht einen detaillierten Einblick in die Lernhandlungen und die Folgen von Unterstützungsmaßnahmen. Allerdings stellen sich auch eine Reihe von neuen analytischen Herausforderungen, wie der Umgang mit zeitlichen Dynamiken und Sequenzen von Lernhandlungen, insbesondere wenn man über Häufigkeitsanalysen der beobachteten Ereignisse hinausgehen möchte. Vor diesem Hintergrund beschäftigt sich die vorliegende Arbeit mit der Anwendung von Process Mining Methoden zur detaillierten Betrachtung von Lernprozessen. Insbesondere der Mehrwert dieses Ansatzes gegenüber einer reinen Häufigkeitsanalyse und somit die Potentiale von Process Mining für die Evaluation von Fördermaßen sollen herausgestellt werden. Als Grundlage für die Bearbeitung der Fragestellung diente eine umfangreiche Laborstudie mit 70 Universitätsstudierenden, die durchgeführt wurde um die Effekte einer instruktionalen Fördermaßnahme zu prüfen. Die Probanden der Experimentalgruppe (n = 35) erhielten in einer 40-minütigen Hypermedia-Lernsitzung eine Förderung durch metakognitive Prompts, während die Kontrollgruppe (n = 35) ohne Hilfe lernte. In einer weiteren Lernsitzung drei Wochen später bearbeiteten alle Teilnehmer eine weitere Lerneinheit, diesmal ohne Unterstützung für alle Probanden. Während des Lernens wurden alle Teilnehmer instruiert, ihre Lernhandlungen kontinuierlich zu verbalisieren. Die kodierten Verbalprotokolle wurden in den drei Analysen dieser Dissertation detailliert mit Häufigkeits- und Process Mining Analysen untersucht. Die erste Analyse konzentrierte sich auf den Vergleich der Lernhandlungen der Experimental- und Kontrollgruppe während der ersten Sitzung. Es wurde den Fragen nachgegangen, ob metakognitive Prompts die Lerner dazu anregen mehr metakognitive Lernhandlungen auszuführen, ob eine höhere Anzahl dieser Lernhandlungen mit dem Lernerfolg zusammenhängt (Mediation) und welche Unterschiede sich in den Abfolgen der Lernhandlungen finden lassen. In der zweiten Analyse wurden die Effekte der einzelnen Prompts sowie die Bedingungen für ihre Wirksamkeit auf einer sehr detaillierten Ebene betrachtet. Zusätzlich zu Process Mining wurde auch eine Data Mining Methode eingesetzt, um deren Befunde zu vergleichen. Im Detail fanden eine Klassifikation der Prompts anhand ihrer Effektivität und eine Untersuchung der kodierten Lernaktivitäten vor und nach der Präsentation instruktionaler Hilfe statt. Schließlich untersuchte die dritte Analyse die langfristigen Effekte metakognitiver Prompts auf den Lernprozess in einer weiteren Lernsitzung ohne Unterstützung. Hier stand die Frage im Mittelpunkt, welche geförderten Lernaktivitäten und Prozessmuster während der zweiten Lernsitzung stabil blieben. Insgesamt belegen die Ergebnisse aller drei durchgeführten Analysen den Mehrwert von Process Mining im Vergleich zu reinen häufigkeitsbasierten Analysemethoden. Insbesondere unter Betrachtung des Lernprozesses als dynamische Abfolge von mehreren Lernhandlungen, ermöglicht Process Mining die Identifikation von Regulationsschleifen und zentralen Verzweigungen des Prozesses. Diese Befunde könnten zur Optimierung von Interventionen verwendet werden. Bevor aus den aufgedeckten Prozessmustern Schlussfolgerungen für die Gestaltung instruktionaler Hilfe gezogen werden können, müssen allerdings weitere Analysen erst noch die Generalisierbarkeit der Befunde belegen. Darüber hinaus bleibt die Anwendung von Process Mining herausfordernd, da derzeit keine Richtlinien für analytische Entscheidungen und Parametereinstellungen für technologieunterstützte Lernkontexte vorhanden sind. Darum müssen in Zukunft weitere Studien das Potential von Process Mining und verwandten Analysemethoden betrachten, um Forschern konkrete Anwendungsempfehlungen zur Verfügung stellen zu können. Generell kann Process Mining aber bereits jetzt dazu beitragen, das Verständnis der Auswirkungen instruktionaler Hilfe auf der Prozessebene voran zu treiben. KW - Selbstgesteuertes Lernen KW - Prozessanalyse KW - Process Mining KW - Metacognitive Prompting KW - Instructional Support KW - Technology-Enhanced Learning KW - Self-Regulated Learning KW - Metakognition KW - Lautes Denken Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-152354 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mayrhofer, Roland A1 - Hutmacher, Fabian T1 - The Principle of Inversion: Why the Quantitative-Empirical Paradigm Cannot Serve as a Unifying Basis for Psychology as an Academic Discipline JF - Frontiers in Psychology KW - self-perception of psychology KW - principle of inversion KW - methods in psychology KW - operationalism KW - definitions of psychology Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-219487 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 11 ER - TY - THES A1 - Krause, Stefan T1 - How stories influence the self: Antecedents, processes and consequences T1 - Wie Geschichten das Selbst beeinflussen: Antezedenzien, Prozesse und Konsequenzen N2 - The impact of stories in their ability to shape our view on the world has long been a central topic in communication science and media psychology. While reading a book or watching a movie, we are transported into story worlds and we identify with depicted protagonists. Several studies showed that high levels of transportation lead to greater story-consistent beliefs. Similar effects were found for identification. However, much less is known how and in which direction stories could affect the self. Five experimental studies were conducted and summarized in three manuscripts. Manuscript #1 explored the moderating role of transportation that could shift one’s self-perception towards traits of a depicted story character (assimilation) or away from him/her (contrast). Manuscript #2 focused on downward social comparisons with a protagonist and possible contrast effects on participants’ self-perception in relation to others, their motives and behavior. Thereby, the mediating role of transportation and identification were investigated. Finally, upward social comparison with a protagonist and related emotions (e.g., envy) that mediate possible effects on one’s self perception and behavioral intentions were investigated in manuscript #3. This dissertation project contributes to the literature on stories and the self. Consistent with previous work, assimilation effects were found for highly transported recipients. However, stories might also elicit contrast effects on recipients’ selves and behavioral intentions that are opposite to a depicted character. Extending prior research, there were evidence that transportation and envy are important process variables explaining assimilation vs. contrast effects. N2 - Wie Geschichten unsere Weltsicht verändern können ist seit langem ein zentrales Themenfeld in der Kommunikationswissenschaft und Medienpsychologie. Beim Lesen eines Buches oder beim Schauen eines Films werden wir in die Welt der Geschichte hinein trans-portiert und identifizieren uns mit den Protagonisten. Mehrere Studien haben gezeigt, dass Transportation und Identifikation zu Einstellungsänderungen in Übereinstimmung mit der Geschichte führt. Es wurde jedoch bisher weniger wissenschaftlich untersucht wie und in welche Richtung Geschichten das Selbst beeinflussen können. Daher wurden fünf experimentelle Studien durchgeführt und in drei Manuskripten zusammengefasst. In Manuskript #1 wurde die Rolle von Transportation als Moderator auf die Selbstwahrnehmung von Rezipienten erforscht. Eine hohe Ausprägung von Transportation führte zur Assimilation von Protagonisten-Eigenschaften auf die Selbstwahrnehmung, wohin gegen eine niedrige Ausprägung von Transportation in einen Kontrast bei der Selbstwahrnehmung resultierte. Manuskript #2 fokussierte auf soziale Abwärtsvergleiche mit einem Protagonisten und mögliche Kontrasteffekte auf die Selbstwahrnehmung im Vergleich zu anderen Personen, Motiven und tatsächlichem Verhalten. Dabei wurden mögliche Mediatoren, wie Transportation und Identifikation, experimentell manipuliert. In Manuskript #3 standen soziale Aufwärtsvergleiche mit einer Protagonistin und die dabei erlebten Emotionen (z.B. Neid) im Vordergrund, was Effekte auf die eigene Selbstwahrnehmung sowie Verhaltensintentionen mediierte. Meine Dissertation leistet einen Beitrag zum Forschungsfeld Geschichten und das Selbst. Übereinstimmend mit früheren Studien ließen sich Assimilationseffekte bei einem hohen Maß an Transportation finden. Geschichten können jedoch auch zum Protagonisten entgegengesetzte Effekte (Kontrasteffekte) auf die Selbstwahrnehmung und Verhaltensintentionen hervorrufen. Über bisherige Forschung hinaus, fanden sich Belege, dass Transportation und Neid wichtige Prozessvariablen sind, die Assimilations- und Kontrasteffekte erklären können. KW - Selbst KW - Medien KW - Psychologie KW - Narrative KW - Transportation KW - Medien KW - Narrativ Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-207611 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hein, Rebecca M. A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich A1 - Wienrich, Carolin T1 - Inter- and transcultural learning in cocial virtual reality: a proposal for an inter- and transcultural virtual object database to be used in the implementation, reflection, and evaluation of virtual encounters JF - Multimodal Technologies and Interaction N2 - Visual stimuli are frequently used to improve memory, language learning or perception, and understanding of metacognitive processes. However, in virtual reality (VR), there are few systematically and empirically derived databases. This paper proposes the first collection of virtual objects based on empirical evaluation for inter-and transcultural encounters between English- and German-speaking learners. We used explicit and implicit measurement methods to identify cultural associations and the degree of stereotypical perception for each virtual stimuli (n = 293) through two online studies, including native German and English-speaking participants. The analysis resulted in a final well-describable database of 128 objects (called InteractionSuitcase). In future applications, the objects can be used as a great interaction or conversation asset and behavioral measurement tool in social VR applications, especially in the field of foreign language education. For example, encounters can use the objects to describe their culture, or teachers can intuitively assess stereotyped attitudes of the encounters. KW - virtual stimuli KW - implicit association test KW - virtual reality KW - social VR KW - InteractionSuitcase Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-278974 SN - 2414-4088 VL - 6 IS - 7 ER - TY - THES A1 - Ruth, Nicolas T1 - Gute Musik. Repräsentation und Wirkung prosozialer Musik T1 - Good music. Representation and effects of prosocial music N2 - Die vorliegende Rahmenschrift der kumulativen Dissertation umfasst zunächst einen einleitenden Teil, der die zentralen Begriffe „prosoziales Verhalten“ und „prosoziale Musik“ definiert. Anschließend werden der Stand der Forschung zu den Inhalten populärer Musik und zur Wirkung prosozialer Musik aufgezeigt. Im darauffolgenden Abschnitt werden die theoretischen Grundlagen für die Wirkungsstudien dieser Arbeit dargestellt und diskutiert. Das theoretische Gerüst bilden das General Learning Model sowie das Reciprocal Feedback Model of Musical Response. Aspekte dieser theoretischen Ansätze werden schließlich kombiniert, um sie in ein eigenes Musikwirkungsmodell zu überführen. Das übergeordnete Forschungsvorhaben wird in zwei zentrale Vorhaben aufgeteilt – die Analyse der Repräsentation und die Untersuchung der Wirkung prosozialer Musik – und im anschließenden Kapitel dargestellt. Im Zentrum des Dissertationsprojekts stehen die vier empirischen Arbeiten, mit denen die Forschungsvorhaben realisiert wurden. Um die Repräsentation pro-sozialen Verhaltens in populärer Musik zu untersuchen, wurde eine Inhaltsanalyse durchgeführt (erschienen bei Musicae Scientiae). Zur Überprüfung der Wirkung prosozialer Musik wurden eine experimentelle Feldstudie (erschienen bei Psychology of Music), zwei aufeinander aufbau-ende Online-Experimente (erschienen bei Musicae Scientiae) und schließlich ein mehrfaktorielles Online-Experiment (erschienen bei Psychology of Music) realisiert. Diese Studien werden in der anschließenden Synopse kurz dargestellt und zueinander in Bezug gesetzt. Den Schluss der Rahmenschrift bilden eine Zusammenfassung und Diskussion der Ergebnisse sowie ein Fazit mit Ausblick auf mögliche weitere Untersuchungen. N2 - Many artists of popular music genres are committed to charity and prosocial work. Often we find references to prosocial behavior in the lyrics of those musicians. However, most research so far examined only negative and not positive effects of popular music. That is why this paper-based thesis investigated the representation of prosocial behavior in songs and the effects of music with prosocial lyrics. The synopsis defines fundamental concepts and gives an overview of the state of research and relevant theoretical approaches. Finally, it ends with a discussion of the published studies and an outlook for future research. KW - Wirkung KW - Populäre Musik KW - prosoziale Inhalte KW - Prosoziales Verhalten KW - Rezeption KW - Musik Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-164528 ER - TY - THES A1 - Brill, Michael T1 - Spontaneous eye blinks as an alternative measure for spatial presence experiences T1 - Spontanes Lidschlussverhalten als alternativer Messzugang zu räumlichem Präsenzerleben N2 - Spatial presence, a state in which media users temporarily overlook the mediated nature of their media use experience, is frequently assessed by means of post-session self-report scales. However, such methods have methodical limitations, for example concerning measurement of dynamic fluctuations in presence during media use. Consequently, researchers have tested several approaches that try to infer subjective experiences of spatial presence from objectively measurable indicators. The present doctoral thesis examines aspects of temporal structure in spontaneous eye-blink behavior. Cognitive processes—and especially attention—are seen as essential antecedents of presence experiences. Because such cognitive processes influence timing of spontaneous eye-blinks, it is tested if the degree of stimulus-dependent structure in spontaneous eye-blink behavior is related to presence self-report scores. To address this research question, the thesis first establishes a theoretical framework, including theorizing and empirical findings on presence, on related media use phenomena, spontaneous eye-blink behavior, and subjective and objective approaches for presence assessment. Then, three experiments are presented that examine the relation between self-reported presence, and amount of stimulus-dependent structure in blinking behavior. Three different methods for quantification of stimulus-dependent structure are tested in different media environments, and are related to an established presence scale. Discussion of the experimental findings leads, on the one hand, to fundamental questions on the presence concept and on the understanding of stimulus-dependent structure in spontaneous eye-blink behavior. On the other hand, interpretation of the results emphasizes the necessity for methods with appropriate temporal resolution, that consider both media events and user behavior. N2 - Räumliches Präsenzerleben bei der Mediennutzung, also ein Zustand, in dem MediennutzerInnen zeitweise vergessen, dass die genutzten Inhalte medial vermittelt sind, wird häufig durch Selbstauskunft in Fragebögen erhoben. Solche Methoden weisen jedoch einige Einschränkungen auf, beispielsweise bei der Erfassung dynamischer Schwankungen des Präsenzerlebens während der Mediennutzung. Daher wurde eine Reihe von Ansätzen erprobt, die versuchen, durch objektive Erfassung verschiedener Indikatoren auf die subjektiv erlebte Präsenz von MediennutzerInnen zu schließen. In dieser Dissertation wird die zeitliche Struktur des spontanen Lidschlussverhaltens als Indikator untersucht. Für die Entstehung von Präsenzerleben werden kognitive Prozesse und ganz besonders Aufmerksamkeit als wesentliche Vorläufer angesehen. Spontanes Lidschlussverhalten wird von solchen kognitiven Vorgängen beeinflusst; daher wurde untersucht, inwiefern das Ausmaß von Stimulus-abhängiger Struktur im spontanen Lidschlussverhalten mit der Selbstauskunft über Präsenzerleben zusammenhängt. Zur Untersuchung dieser Fragestellung wird in der Dissertation zunächst ein theoretischer Rahmen konstruiert, der die Bereiche Präsenzerleben und ähnliche Konzepte der Mediennutzung, sowie Lidschlussverhalten und subjektive und objektive Erhebungsverfahren für Präsenz behandelt. Anschließend werden drei Experimente beschrieben, welche die Beziehung zwischen dem Ausmaß an Struktur im Lidschlussverhalten und dem berichteten Präsenzerleben untersuchen. Drei verschiedene Verfahren zur Quantifizierung Stimulus-abhängiger Struktur der Lidschlüsse werden in verschiedenen Medienumgebungen untersucht und zu einem etablierten Fragebogeninstrument für räumliches Präsenzerleben in Beziehung gesetzt. Aus der Diskussion der Ergebnisse folgen einerseits grundlegende Fragen zum Verständnis von Präsenzerleben und von Stimulus-abhängiger Struktur im spontanen Lidschlussverhalten. Andererseits wird, gerade in Hinsicht auf interaktive Medien, die Notwendigkeit von Methoden mit angemessener zeitlicher Auflösung betont, die sowohl Medienereignisse als auch Nutzerverhalten berücksichtigen. N2 - Spatial presence is a state in which media users temporarily overlook the mediated nature of their experience. This study discusses stimulus-dependent structure in spontaneous eye-blink behavior as analternative to presence selfreport measures. To this end, theories and empirical evidence on presence, spontaneous eye-blink behavior, and existing approaches for presence assessment are used to link antecedent processes of presence, especially attention, to presence and structure in blinking behavior. Three experiments in different media environments relate three different methods for quantification of stimulus-dependent structure to an established presence scale. The results are not conclusive, but raise questions on presence and its measurement, and advance the understanding of stimulus-dependent structure in spontaneous eye-blink behavior. KW - Lidschlag KW - Visuelle Aufmerksamkeit KW - Medienkonsum KW - Präsenz KW - presence KW - measurement KW - Messung KW - Psychometrie KW - Muster Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-167898 SN - 978-3-95826-094-8 SN - 978-3-95826-095-5 N1 - Parallel erschienen als Druckausgabe in Würzburg University Press, 978-3-95826-094-8, 32,90 EUR. PB - Würzburg University Press CY - Würzburg ET - 1. Auflage ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lange, Benjamin P. A1 - Wühr, Peter A1 - Schwarz, Sascha T1 - Of Time Gals and Mega Men: Empirical Findings on Gender Differences in Digital Game Genre Preferences and the Accuracy of Respective Gender Stereotypes JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - We investigated the accuracy of gender stereotypes regarding digital game genre preferences. In Study 1, 484 female and male participants rated their preference for 17 game genres (gender differences). In Study 2, another sample of 226 participants rated the extent to which the same genres were presumably preferred by women or men (gender stereotypes). We then compared the results of both studies in order to determine the accuracy of the gender stereotypes. Study 1 revealed actual gender differences for most genres—mostly of moderate size. Study 2 revealed substantial gender stereotypes about genre preferences. When comparing the results from both studies, we found that gender stereotypes were accurate in direction for most genres. However, they were, to some degree, inaccurate in size: For most genres, gender stereotypes overestimated the actual gender difference with a moderate mean effect size. KW - digital game KW - genre KW - stereotype accuracy KW - gender differences KW - sex differences Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-238278 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 12 ER - TY - THES A1 - Winter, Carla T1 - Evaluation der Verwendung von Virtueller Realität (VR) als Ergänzung zum Laufbandtraining im Rahmen der Behandlung von Gangstörungen bei Patienten mit Multipler Sklerose (MS) und Schlaganfall T1 - Evaluation of the use of virtual reality (VR) as a supplement to treadmill training in the treatment of gait disorders in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and stroke N2 - Die Rehabilitation von Gangstörungen bei Patienten mit MS und Schlaganfall erfolgt häufig mithilfe eines konventionellen Laufbandtrainings. Einige Studien haben bereits gezeigt, dass durch eine Erweiterung dieses Trainings um eine virtuelle Realität die Motivation der Patienten gesteigert und die Therapieergebnisse verbessert werden können. In der vorliegenden Studie wurde eine immersive VR-Anwendung (unter Verwendung eines HMD) für die Gangrehabilitation von Patienten evaluiert. Hierbei wurden ihre Anwendbarkeit und Akzeptanz geprüft sowie ihre Kurzzeiteffekte mit einer semi-immersiven Präsentation (unter Verwendung eines Monitors) und mit einem konventionellen Laufbandtraining ohne VR verglichen. Der Fokus lag insbesondere auf der Untersuchung der Anwendbarkeit beider Systeme und der Auswirkungen auf die Laufgeschwindigkeit und Motivation der Benutzer. Im Rahmen einer Studie mit Innersubjekt-Design nahmen zunächst 36 gesunde Teilnehmer und anschließend 14 Patienten mit MS oder Schlaganfall an drei experimentellen Bedingungen (VR über HMD, VR über Monitor, Laufbandtraining ohne VR) teil. Sowohl in der Studie mit gesunden Teilnehmern als auch in der Patientenstudie zeigte sich in der HMD-Bedingung eine höhere Laufgeschwindigkeit als beim Laufbandtraining ohne VR und in der Monitor-Bedingung. Die gesunden Studienteilnehmer berichteten über eine höhere Motivation nach der HMD-Bedingung als nach den anderen Bedingungen. Es traten in beiden Gruppen keine Nebenwirkungen im Sinne einer Simulator Sickness auf und es wurden auch keine Erhöhungen der Herzfrequenzen nach den VR-Bedingungen detektiert. Die Bewertungen des Präsenzerlebens waren in beiden Gruppen in der HMD-Bedingung höher als in der Monitor-Bedingung. Beide VR-Bedingungen erhielten hohe Bewertungen für die Benutzerfreundlichkeit. Die meisten der gesunden Teilnehmer (89 %) und Patienten (71 %) präferierten das HMD-basierte Laufbandtraining unter den drei Trainingsformen und die meisten Patienten könnten sich vorstellen, es häufiger zu nutzen. Mit der vorliegenden Studie wurde eine strukturierte Evaluation der Anwendbarkeit eines immersiven VR-Systems für die Gangrehabilitation geprüft und dieses erstmals in den direkten Vergleich zu einem semi-immersiven System und einem konventionellen Training ohne VR gesetzt. Die Studie bestätigte die Praktikabilität der Kombination eines Laufbandtrainings mit immersiver VR. Aufgrund ihrer hohen Benutzerfreundlichkeit und der geringen Nebenwirkungen scheint diese Trainingsform besonders für Patienten geeignet zu sein, um deren Trainingsmotivation und Trainingserfolge, wie z. B. die Laufgeschwindigkeit, zu steigern. Da immersive VR-Systeme allerdings nach wie vor spezifische technische Installationsprozeduren erfordern, sollte für die spezifische klinische Anwendung eine Kosten-Nutzen-Bewertung erfolgen. N2 - Rehabilitation of gait disorders in patients with MS and stroke is often done with the help of conventional treadmill training. Some studies have already shown that extending this training with virtual reality can increase patient motivation and improve therapy outcomes. In the present study, an immersive VR application (using an HMD) was evaluated for gait rehabilitation of patients. Here, its applicability and acceptability were tested, and its short-term effects were compared with a semi-immersive presentation (using a monitor) and with conventional treadmill training without VR. In particular, the focus was on investigating the applicability of both systems and the effects on user walking speed and motivation. In a study using a within-subjects design, first 36 healthy participants and then 14 patients with MS or stroke participated in three experimental conditions (VR via HMD, VR via monitor, treadmill training without VR). In both the healthy participant study and the patient study, the HMD condition showed a higher walking speed than the treadmill training without VR and the monitor condition. The healthy study participants reported higher motivation after the HMD condition than after the other conditions. No side effects in terms of simulator sickness occurred in either group, and no increases in heart rates were detected after the VR conditions. Presence experience ratings were higher in both groups in the HMD condition than in the monitor condition. Both VR conditions received high ratings for usability. Most of the healthy participants (89%) and patients (71%) preferred the HMD-based treadmill training among the three training modalities, and most patients could imagine using it more often. The present study tested a structured evaluation of the applicability of an immersive VR system for gait rehabilitation and, for the first time, compared it directly with a semi-immersive system and conventional training without VR. The study confirmed the practicability of combining treadmill training with immersive VR. Due to its high usability and low side effects, this form of training seems to be particularly suitable for patients to increase their training motivation and training success, such as walking speed. However, immersive VR systems still require specific technical installation procedures, so a cost-benefit assessment should be performed for the specific clinical application. KW - Multiple Sklerose KW - Schlaganfall KW - Virtuelle Realität KW - Motivation KW - Head-mounted Display KW - Neurorehabilitation KW - Laufbandtraining KW - Treadmill training Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-280544 ER - TY - THES A1 - Dittrich, Monique T1 - Persuasive Technology to Mitigate Aggressive Driving : A Human-centered Design Approach T1 - Persuasive Technologie zur Minderung Aggressiven Fahrens : Ein menschzentrierter Design-Ansatz N2 - Manifestations of aggressive driving, such as tailgating, speeding, or swearing, are not trivial offenses but are serious problems with hazardous consequences—for the offender as well as the target of aggression. Aggression on the road erases the joy of driving, affects heart health, causes traffic jams, and increases the risk of traffic accidents. This work is aimed at developing a technology-driven solution to mitigate aggressive driving according to the principles of Persuasive Technology. Persuasive Technology is a scientific field dealing with computerized software or information systems that are designed to reinforce, change, or shape attitudes, behaviors, or both without using coercion or deception. Against this background, the Driving Feedback Avatar (DFA) was developed through this work. The system is a visual in-car interface that provides the driver with feedback on aggressive driving. The main element is an abstract avatar displayed in the vehicle. The feedback is transmitted through the emotional state of this avatar, i.e., if the driver behaves aggressively, the avatar becomes increasingly angry (negative feedback). If no aggressive action occurs, the avatar is more relaxed (positive feedback). In addition, directly after an aggressive action is recognized by the system, the display is flashing briefly to give the driver an instant feedback on his action. Five empirical studies were carried out as part of the human-centered design process of the DFA. They were aimed at understanding the user and the use context of the future system, ideating system ideas, and evaluating a system prototype. The initial research question was about the triggers of aggressive driving. In a driver study on a public road, 34 participants reported their emotions and their triggers while they were driving (study 1). The second research question asked for interventions to cope with aggression in everyday life. For this purpose, 15 experts dealing with the treatment of aggressive individuals were interviewed (study 2). In total, 75 triggers of aggressive driving and 34 anti-aggression interventions were identified. Inspired by these findings, 108 participants generated more than 100 ideas of how to mitigate aggressive driving using technology in a series of ideation workshops (study 3). Based on these ideas, the concept of the DFA was elaborated on. In an online survey, the concept was evaluated by 1,047 German respondents to get a first assessment of its perception (study 4). Later on, the DFA was implemented into a prototype and evaluated in an experimental driving study with 32 participants, focusing on the system’s effectiveness (study 5). The DFA had only weak and, in part, unexpected effects on aggressive driving that require a deeper discussion. With the DFA, this work has shown that there is room to change aggressive driving through Persuasive Technology. However, this is a very sensitive issue with special requirements regarding the design of avatar-based feedback systems in the context of aggressive driving. Moreover, this work makes a significant contribution through the number of empirical insights gained on the problem of aggressive driving and wants to encourage future research and design activities in this regard. N2 - Aggressives Fahren, egal ob Drängeln, Rasen oder Fluchen, ist kein Kavaliersdelikt, sondern ein ernstzunehmendes Problem mit schwerwiegenden Folgen—sowohl für den Täter als auch für das Opfer. Es nimmt die Freude am Fahren, beeinträchtigt die Herzgesundheit, verursacht Stau und erhöht das Unfallrisiko. Ziel dieser Arbeit war es daher nach den Prinzipien persuasiver Technologie (engl. Persuasive Technology) eine technische Lösung zu entwickeln, die aggressives Fahren verringert. Als persuasiv werden Systeme bezeichnet, die ein bestimmtes Verhalten oder eine bestimmte Einstellung ihres Nutzers verstärken, verändern oder formen, ohne dabei Zwang auf ihn auszuüben oder ihn zu täuschen. Vor diesem Hintergrund wurde im Rahmen dieser Arbeit der sogenannte Driving Feedback Avatar (DFA) entwickelt. Das System ist eine visuelle Benutzerschnittstelle im Fahrzeug, die dem Fahrer Rückmeldung zu bestimmten aggressiven Verhaltensweisen gibt. Hauptelement ist ein abstrakter Avatar, der in einem Display angezeigt wird. Das Feedback selbst wird durch den emotionalen Zustand dieses Avatars vermittelt. Verhält sich der Fahrer aggressiv, wird er zunehmend wütender (negatives Feedback). Legt der Fahrer hingegen keine aggressiven Verhaltensweisen an den Tag, zeigt sich der Avatar nach und nach entspannter (positives Feedback). Darüber hinaus erhält der Fahrer ein sofortiges Feedback, indem das Display kurz aufblinkt, direkt nachdem eine aggressive Handlung vom System erkannt wurde. Zur Entwicklung des Systems wurden, unter Einsatz menschenzentrierter Forschungsmethoden, insgesamt fünf empirische Studien durchgeführt. Diese dienten dazu, den Nutzer und den Nutzungskontext des zukünftigen Systems zu verstehen, Ideen für mögliche Systeme zu entwickeln und die finale Lösung anhand eines Prototypens zu evaluieren. Zunächst stand dabei die Forschungsfrage im Raum, welche Auslöser für aggressives Fahren es heute gibt. In einer Fahrerstudie auf öffentlicher Straße berichteten dazu 34 Teilnehmer während der Fahrt von ihren Emotionen und deren Auslösern (Studie 1). Die zweite Forschungsfrage ergründete Maßnahmen zur Bewältigung von Aggression im Alltag. Hierzu wurden 15 Experten, die sich beruflich mit der Behandlung von aggressiven Personen befassen, interviewt (Studie 2). Insgesamt konnten so 75 Auslöser aggressiven Fahrens und 34 Maßnahmen zur Regulierung von Aggression im Allgemeinen abgeleitet werden. Inspiriert von diesen Erkenntnissen, entwickelten 108 Teilnehmer in einer Reihe von Workshops mehr als 100 Ideen, wie Aggression beim Fahren, unter Einsatz von Technologie, verringert werden könnte (Studie 3). Basierend auf diesen Ideen, entstand das Konzept des DFA. In einer Onlineumfrage mit 1.047 deutschen Teilnehmern wurde das Konzept evaluiert, um eine erste Bewertung der Wahrnehmung des Systems zu erhalten (Studie 4). Später wurde der DFA prototypisch umgesetzt und dessen Effektivität in einer Fahrerstudie unter experimentellen Bedingungen untersucht (Studie 5). Es zeigte sich, dass das System nur schwache und in Teilen auch unerwartete Effekte hat, die eine eingehende Diskussion verlangen. Diese Arbeit hat gezeigt, dass es möglich ist, aggressives Fahren mit Hilfe persuasiver Technologie zu beeinflussen. Jedoch ist dies ein sehr sensibles Vorhaben, das besondere Anforderungen an das Design Avatar-basierter Feedbacksysteme im Kontext aggressiven Fahrens stellt. Darüber hinaus leistet diese Arbeit vor allem aufgrund der gewonnenen empirischen Erkenntnisse rund um das Problem aggressiven Fahrens einen wichtigen Beitrag für Wissenschaft und Praxis und will zu weiteren Forschungs- und Designaktivitäten anregen. KW - Fahrerassistenzsystem KW - Avatar KW - Fahrerverhalten KW - Aggression KW - Driving Behavior KW - Aggressive Driving KW - Behavior Change KW - Empirical Research KW - In-Car Interface KW - Mensch-Maschine-Kommunikation KW - Persuasive Technology KW - Human-Centered Design Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-230226 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wolf, Erik A1 - Döllinger, Nina A1 - Mal, David A1 - Wenninger, Stephan A1 - Bartl, Andrea A1 - Botsch, Mario A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich A1 - Wienrich, Carolin T1 - Does distance matter? Embodiment and perception of personalized avatars in relation to the self-observation distance in virtual reality JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - Virtual reality applications employing avatar embodiment typically use virtual mirrors to allow users to perceive their digital selves not only from a first-person but also from a holistic third-person perspective. However, due to distance-related biases such as the distance compression effect or a reduced relative rendering resolution, the self-observation distance (SOD) between the user and the virtual mirror might influence how users perceive their embodied avatar. Our article systematically investigates the effects of a short (1 m), middle (2.5 m), and far (4 m) SOD between users and mirror on the perception of their personalized and self-embodied avatars. The avatars were photorealistic reconstructed using state-of-the-art photogrammetric methods. Thirty participants repeatedly faced their real-time animated self-embodied avatars in each of the three SOD conditions, where they were repeatedly altered in their body weight, and participants rated the 1) sense of embodiment, 2) body weight perception, and 3) affective appraisal towards their avatar. We found that the different SODs are unlikely to influence any of our measures except for the perceived body weight estimation difficulty. Here, the participants perceived the difficulty significantly higher for the farthest SOD. We further found that the participants’ self-esteem significantly impacted their ability to modify their avatar’s body weight to their current body weight and that it positively correlated with the perceived attractiveness of the avatar. Additionally, the participants’ concerns about their body shape affected how eerie they perceived their avatars. The participants’ self-esteem and concerns about their body shape influenced the perceived body weight estimation difficulty. We conclude that the virtual mirror in embodiment scenarios can be freely placed and varied at a distance of one to four meters from the user without expecting major effects on the perception of the avatar. KW - virtual human KW - virtual body ownership KW - agency KW - body image distortion KW - body weight perception KW - body weight modification KW - affective appraisal KW - distance compression Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-299415 SN - 2673-4192 VL - 3 ER - TY - THES A1 - Marker, Caroline T1 - On a meta-level: Contributions of meta-analytic summaries in media psychological research T1 - Auf der Meta-Ebene: Der Beitrag meta-analytischer Zusammenfassungen für die Medienpsychologie N2 - The rising use of new media has given rise to public discussions about their possible negative consequences. The social sciences have answered these concerns, providing many studies investigating different media types (e.g., social media, video games) and different related variables (e.g., psychological well-being, academic achievement). Within this big body of research, some research results have confirmed negative associations with frequent media use; other studies have found no or even positive relationships. With heterogeneous results, it is difficult to obtain a clear picture of the relationships and causalities of new media. The method of meta-analysis allows a synthesis of all existing data, providing an overall effect size as well as moderator and mediator analyses which might explain the heterogeneity. Three manuscripts present meta-analytic evidence related to a) the relationship between social media use and academic achievement, b) the relationship between video gaming and overweight, and c) the relationship between social media and psychological correlates. Manuscript #1 found small relationships which depend on the usage pattern of social media. The relationship is positive, as long as social media use is related to school. Manuscript #2 showed that children’s and adolescents’ video gaming is independent from their body mass, while adults who play more have a higher body mass. Manuscript #3 summarized existing meta-analytic evidence that links social media with psychological wellbeing, academic achievement, and narcissism with small to moderate effect sizes. All three manuscripts underscore the potential of meta-analyses to synthesize previous research and to identify moderators. Although meta-analyses are not necessarily superior to other approaches because of their limitations (e.g. limited information or quality of primary studies) they are very promising for media psychology. Meta-analyses can reduce complexity and might be helpful for the communication of research results to the general public. N2 - Die Entwicklung neuer Medien wurde von öffentlichen Debatten über mögliche negative Folgen begleitet. Wissenschaftler*innen reagierten auf diese Bedenken mit einer Vielzahl von Studien und untersuchten mögliche Effekte verschiedener Medientypen (z. B. soziale Medien, Videospiele) auf verschiedene Variablen (z. B. psychologisches Wohlbefinden, akademische Leistungen). Während manche Forschungsergebnisse die diskutierten negativen Zusammenhänge häufiger Mediennutzung bestätigten, fanden andere Studien jedoch keine oder sogar positive Zusammenhänge. Die Forschungslage zu medienpsychologischen Fragestellungen zeigt oft heterogene Ergebnisse, die keine abschließenden Aussagen erlauben. Eine Lösung für dieses Problem ist die Methode der Meta-Analyse. Hierbei werden alle vorhandenen Studien zusammengefasst und ein Gesamteffekt berechnet. Darüber hinaus können Moderator- und Mediatoranalysen durchgeführt werden, die die Heterogenität zwischen den Studien erklären könnten. In drei Manuskripten wurden a) die Beziehung zwischen Social Media-Nutzung und akademischen Leistungen, b) die Beziehung zwischen Videospielen und Übergewicht und c) die Beziehung zwischen sozialen Medien und psychologischen Korrelaten meta-analytisch untersucht. In Manuskript Nr. 1 zeigte sich, dass der Zusammenhang zwischen sozialen Medien und akademischer Leistung von der Art der Nutzung abhing. Der Zusammenhang war positiv, solange die Nutzung sozialer Medien akademischen Zwecken diente. Manuskript 2 zeigte, dass das Körpergewicht von Kindern und Jugendlichen nicht in Verbindung mit der Videospielenutzung stand, während Erwachsene, die mehr spielten, eine höhere Körpermasse hatten. Manuskript Nr. 3 fasste meta-analytische Studien mit gleichen Fragestellungen zu sozialen Medien und psychologischen Variablen (Wohlbefinden, akademische Leistung, Narzissmus) zusammen. Alle drei Manuskripte unterstreichen das Potenzial von Metaanalysen, den existierenden Forschungsstand zusammenzufassen und Moderatorvariablen zu identifizieren. Obwohl Meta-Analysen aufgrund ihrer Einschränkungen (z. B. die begrenzte Anzahl und Qualität von Primärstudien) anderen Methoden nicht unbedingt überlegen sind, sind sie dennoch für medienpsychologische Fragestellungen sehr vielversprechend. Metaanalysen sind in der Lage die Komplexität des Forschungsstands zu reduzieren und könnten für die Kommunikation von Forschungsergebnissen an die breite Öffentlichkeit hilfreich sein. KW - Medienkonsum KW - Social Media KW - Schulleistung KW - Übergewicht KW - Psychologie KW - Meta-analysis KW - new media KW - academic achievement KW - well-being KW - body weight KW - Metaanalyse KW - akademische Leistung KW - Körpergewicht KW - Wohlbefinden KW - Neue Medien Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-209173 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - von Mammen, Sebastian Albrecht A1 - Wagner, Daniel A1 - Knote, Andreas A1 - Taskin, Umut T1 - Interactive simulations of biohybrid systems JF - Frontiers in Robotics and AI N2 - In this article, we present approaches to interactive simulations of biohybrid systems. These simulations are comprised of two major computational components: (1) agent-based developmental models that retrace organismal growth and unfolding of technical scaffoldings and (2) interfaces to explore these models interactively. Simulations of biohybrid systems allow us to fast forward and experience their evolution over time based on our design decisions involving the choice, configuration and initial states of the deployed biological and robotic actors as well as their interplay with the environment. We briefly introduce the concept of swarm grammars, an agent-based extension of L-systems for retracing growth processes and structural artifacts. Next, we review an early augmented reality prototype for designing and projecting biohybrid system simulations into real space. In addition to models that retrace plant behaviors, we specify swarm grammar agents to braid structures in a self-organizing manner. Based on this model, both robotic and plant-driven braiding processes can be experienced and explored in virtual worlds. We present an according user interface for use in virtual reality. As we present interactive models concerning rather diverse description levels, we only ensured their principal capacity for interaction but did not consider efficiency analyzes beyond prototypic operation. We conclude this article with an outlook on future works on melding reality and virtuality to drive the design and deployment of biohybrid systems. KW - biohybrid systems KW - augmented reality KW - virtual reality KW - user interfaces KW - biological development KW - generative systems Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-195755 SN - 2296-9144 VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Eder, Andreas B. A1 - Maas, Franzisca A1 - Schubmann, Alexander A1 - Krishna, Anand A1 - Erle, Thorsten M. T1 - Motivations underlying self-infliction of pain during thinking for pleasure JF - Scientific Reports N2 - Previous research suggested that people prefer to administer unpleasant electric shocks to themselves rather than being left alone with their thoughts because engagement in thinking is an unpleasant activity. The present research examined this negative reinforcement hypothesis by giving participants a choice of distracting themselves with the generation of electric shock causing no to intense pain. Four experiments (N = 254) replicated the result that a large proportion of participants opted to administer painful shocks to themselves during the thinking period. However, they administered strong electric shocks to themselves even when an innocuous response option generating no or a mild shock was available. Furthermore, participants inflicted pain to themselves when they were assisted in the generation of pleasant thoughts during the waiting period, with no difference between pleasant versus unpleasant thought conditions. Overall, these results question that the primary motivation for the self-administration of painful shocks is avoidance of thinking. Instead, it seems that the self-infliction of pain was attractive for many participants, because they were curious about the shocks, their intensities, and the effects they would have on them. KW - pain KW - self-infliction KW - thinking Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-301059 VL - 12 IS - 1 ER - TY - THES A1 - Herget, Ann-Kristin T1 - Emotionsquelle, Bedeutungsträger, Taktgeber? Zur Wirksamkeit von Hintergrundmusik in audiovisuellen Medienformaten T1 - Source of emotion, meaning, and structure? On the effectiveness of background music in audio-visual media formats N2 - Hintergrundmusik wird in verschiedenen audiovisuellen Medienformaten häufig und meist mit einer ganz bestimmten Intention eingesetzt. Ziel dieser Dissertation war es, durch eine umfangreiche Aufarbeitung bisheriger Forschung Faktoren zu ermitteln und empirisch zu testen, die beeinflussen, dass Hintergrundmusik in audiovisuellen Medienformaten prognostizierbar die ihr zugesprochenen Funktionen erfüllt. Als interdisziplinärer Forschungsgegenstand bedarf Hintergrundmusik eines möglichst ausgewogenen Blickwinkels, der Musik- und Medienkontext-Spezifika (und deren potentielle Interaktionen) gleichermaßen berücksichtigt. Um Hintergrundmusik als komplexem audiovisuellen Stimulus in empirischer Forschung gerecht zu werden, spielen zudem auch praktische Implikationen eine große Rolle. Diese Herausforderungen berücksichtigend wurde die Wirksamkeit von Hintergrundmusik in fünf Studien im Kontext von drei verschiedenen Medienformaten untersucht. Da Werbung, Film und informationsvermittelnde Medienformate (wie Dokumentationen und TV-Magazine) die drei Kernfunktionen von Medien – Persuasion, Unterhaltung und Information – repräsentieren, sollte auf Grundlage dieses Dreiklangs die Bandbreite potenzieller Wirkungen von effektiv eingesetzter Musik und von Faktoren, die ihre Wirkung beeinflussen, möglichst umfassend (wenn auch sicher nicht vollständig) abgebildet werden. Über alle Medienformate hinweg kann als wichtiger, die Wirksamkeit von Hintergrundmusik verstärkender Einflussfaktor eine Kongruenz, d.h. eine intuitiv wahrgenommene Passung von Musik und Medienkontext ausgemacht werden, die durch eine sorgfältige Abstimmung der Spezifika von Musik und Medienformat auf emotionaler, auf assoziativer und auf struktureller Ebene erreicht werden kann. Findet diese Anwendung, kann Musik systematisch die Wirksamkeit von Werbespots steigern (Studie 1 und 2), gezielt Bedeutung vermitteln und dadurch die Wahrnehmung und Interpretation von (deutungsoffenen) Filmszenen prägen (Studie 3 und 4) oder unter bestimmten Bedingungen das persuasive Potenzial eines informationsvermittelnden Medienformats steigern und so die Meinungsbildung der Rezipierenden (zumindest kurzfristig) beeinflussen (Studie 5). Die Arbeit verdeutlicht, wie mittels interdisziplinärer Perspektivierung und der Beachtung praktischer Implikationen bereits etabliertes Wissen verstetigt und neue Erkenntnisse zur Verwendung und Wirkung von Hintergrundmusik für Wissenschaft und Medienpraxis abgeleitet werden können – inklusive eines Ausblicks auf daraus resultierende Potenziale für zukünftige Forschung. N2 - Although it is frequently used and is highly valued in practice, background music in different audio-visual media formats has shown a broad spectrum of ambiguous results in previous empirical research. This research project aimed to identify and empirically test factors that are relevant for predicting music’s effects in audio-visual media formats. Background music used in different media formats should be handled as an interdisciplinary and complex research object. Accordingly, specifics of music and media context (and their potential interactions) should be equally considered. Moreover, when dealing with a complex audio-visual stimulus in empirical research, external validity and practical implications are crucial. Considering these challenges, the effectiveness of background music was investigated in five studies in the context of three different media formats. Advertising, film, and non-fictional media formats (such as documentaries and TV magazines) represent the three core functions of media—persuasion, entertainment, and information. Therefore, a broad range of background music’s potential effects and factors influencing its impact should be displayed in these diverse media formats. The most important influencing factor enhancing background music’s effectiveness is the intuitively perceived congruence of music and media context. It can be achieved by carefully matching the specifics of music and media format on an emotional, semantic, and structural level. Music that can be considered congruent on these levels can systematically increase TV commercials’ effectiveness (Studies 1 and 2). It can convey specific meaning and shape the perception and interpretation of an ambiguous film scene (Studies 3 and 4). Under certain conditions, congruent background music also increases the persuasive potential of a non-fictional media format and can influence the recipients’ opinions (study 5). This research project illustrates how already established knowledge can be strengthened, and new insights into the use and effects of background music can be derived for science as well as media practice when background music—an interdisciplinary and complex research object—is handled competently. KW - Background KW - Filmmusik KW - Werbung KW - Massenmedien KW - Hintergrundmusik KW - Filmmusik KW - Einsatz und Wirkung KW - Musikalische Kongruenz KW - Interdisziplinäre Forschung KW - Background Music KW - Musical Fit KW - Massenmedien / Wirkung Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-232121 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wienrich, Carolin A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich T1 - eXtended Artificial Intelligence: New Prospects of Human-AI Interaction Research JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - Artificial Intelligence (AI) covers a broad spectrum of computational problems and use cases. Many of those implicate profound and sometimes intricate questions of how humans interact or should interact with AIs. Moreover, many users or future users do have abstract ideas of what AI is, significantly depending on the specific embodiment of AI applications. Human-centered-design approaches would suggest evaluating the impact of different embodiments on human perception of and interaction with AI. An approach that is difficult to realize due to the sheer complexity of application fields and embodiments in reality. However, here XR opens new possibilities to research human-AI interactions. The article’s contribution is twofold: First, it provides a theoretical treatment and model of human-AI interaction based on an XR-AI continuum as a framework for and a perspective of different approaches of XR-AI combinations. It motivates XR-AI combinations as a method to learn about the effects of prospective human-AI interfaces and shows why the combination of XR and AI fruitfully contributes to a valid and systematic investigation of human-AI interactions and interfaces. Second, the article provides two exemplary experiments investigating the aforementioned approach for two distinct AI-systems. The first experiment reveals an interesting gender effect in human-robot interaction, while the second experiment reveals an Eliza effect of a recommender system. Here the article introduces two paradigmatic implementations of the proposed XR testbed for human-AI interactions and interfaces and shows how a valid and systematic investigation can be conducted. In sum, the article opens new perspectives on how XR benefits human-centered AI design and development. KW - human-artificial intelligence interface KW - human-artificial intelligence interaction KW - XR-artificial intelligence continuum KW - XR-artificial intelligence combination KW - research methods KW - human-centered, human-robot KW - recommender system Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-260296 VL - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wienrich, Carolin A1 - Carolus, Astrid T1 - Development of an Instrument to Measure Conceptualizations and Competencies About Conversational Agents on the Example of Smart Speakers JF - Frontiers in Computer Science N2 - The concept of digital literacy has been introduced as a new cultural technique, which is regarded as essential for successful participation in a (future) digitized world. Regarding the increasing importance of AI, literacy concepts need to be extended to account for AI-related specifics. The easy handling of the systems results in increased usage, contrasting limited conceptualizations (e.g., imagination of future importance) and competencies (e.g., knowledge about functional principles). In reference to voice-based conversational agents as a concrete application of AI, the present paper aims for the development of a measurement to assess the conceptualizations and competencies about conversational agents. In a first step, a theoretical framework of “AI literacy” is transferred to the context of conversational agent literacy. Second, the “conversational agent literacy scale” (short CALS) is developed, constituting the first attempt to measure interindividual differences in the “(il) literate” usage of conversational agents. 29 items were derived, of which 170 participants answered. An explanatory factor analysis identified five factors leading to five subscales to assess CAL: storage and transfer of the smart speaker’s data input; smart speaker’s functional principles; smart speaker’s intelligent functions, learning abilities; smart speaker’s reach and potential; smart speaker’s technological (surrounding) infrastructure. Preliminary insights into construct validity and reliability of CALS showed satisfying results. Third, using the newly developed instrument, a student sample’s CAL was assessed, revealing intermediated values. Remarkably, owning a smart speaker did not lead to higher CAL scores, confirming our basic assumption that usage of systems does not guarantee enlightened conceptualizations and competencies. In sum, the paper contributes to the first insights into the operationalization and understanding of CAL as a specific subdomain of AI-related competencies. KW - artificial intelligence literacy KW - artificial intelligence education KW - voice-based artificial intelligence KW - conversational agents KW - measurement Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-260198 VL - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wienrich, Carolin A1 - Reitelbach, Clemens A1 - Carolus, Astrid T1 - The Trustworthiness of Voice Assistants in the Context of Healthcare Investigating the Effect of Perceived Expertise on the Trustworthiness of Voice Assistants, Providers, Data Receivers, and Automatic Speech Recognition JF - Frontiers in Computer Science N2 - As an emerging market for voice assistants (VA), the healthcare sector imposes increasing requirements on the users’ trust in the technological system. To encourage patients to reveal sensitive data requires patients to trust in the technological counterpart. In an experimental laboratory study, participants were presented a VA, which was introduced as either a “specialist” or a “generalist” tool for sexual health. In both conditions, the VA asked the exact same health-related questions. Afterwards, participants assessed the trustworthiness of the tool and further source layers (provider, platform provider, automatic speech recognition in general, data receiver) and reported individual characteristics (disposition to trust and disclose sexual information). Results revealed that perceiving the VA as a specialist resulted in higher trustworthiness of the VA and of the provider, the platform provider and automatic speech recognition in general. Furthermore, the provider’s trustworthiness affected the perceived trustworthiness of the VA. Presenting both a theoretical line of reasoning and empirical data, the study points out the importance of the users’ perspective on the assistant. In sum, this paper argues for further analyses of trustworthiness in voice-based systems and its effects on the usage behavior as well as the impact on responsible design of future technology. KW - voice assistant KW - trustworthiness KW - trust KW - anamnesis tool KW - expertise framing (Min5-Max 8) Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-260209 VL - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wienrich, Carolin A1 - Komma, Philipp A1 - Vogt, Stephanie A1 - Latoschik, Marc E. T1 - Spatial Presence in Mixed Realities – Considerations About the Concept, Measures, Design, and Experiments JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - Plenty of theories, models, measures, and investigations target the understanding of virtual presence, i.e., the sense of presence in immersive Virtual Reality (VR). Other varieties of the so-called eXtended Realities (XR), e.g., Augmented and Mixed Reality (AR and MR) incorporate immersive features to a lesser degree and continuously combine spatial cues from the real physical space and the simulated virtual space. This blurred separation questions the applicability of the accumulated knowledge about the similarities of virtual presence and presence occurring in other varieties of XR, and corresponding outcomes. The present work bridges this gap by analyzing the construct of presence in mixed realities (MR). To achieve this, the following presents (1) a short review of definitions, dimensions, and measurements of presence in VR, and (2) the state of the art views on MR. Additionally, we (3) derived a working definition of MR, extending the Milgram continuum. This definition is based on entities reaching from real to virtual manifestations at one time point. Entities possess different degrees of referential power, determining the selection of the frame of reference. Furthermore, we (4) identified three research desiderata, including research questions about the frame of reference, the corresponding dimension of transportation, and the dimension of realism in MR. Mainly the relationship between the main aspects of virtual presence of immersive VR, i.e., the place-illusion, and the plausibility-illusion, and of the referential power of MR entities are discussed regarding the concept, measures, and design of presence in MR. Finally, (5) we suggested an experimental setup to reveal the research heuristic behind experiments investigating presence in MR. The present work contributes to the theories and the meaning of and approaches to simulate and measure presence in MR. We hypothesize that research about essential underlying factors determining user experience (UX) in MR simulations and experiences is still in its infancy and hopes this article provides an encouraging starting point to tackle related questions. KW - mixed reality KW - virtual-reality-continuum KW - spatial presence KW - place-illusion KW - plausibility-illusion KW - transportation KW - realism Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-260328 VL - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Glémarec, Yann A1 - Lugrin, Jean-Luc A1 - Bosser, Anne-Gwenn A1 - Collins Jackson, Aryana A1 - Buche, Cédric A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich T1 - Indifferent or Enthusiastic? Virtual Audiences Animation and Perception in Virtual Reality JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - In this paper, we present a virtual audience simulation system for Virtual Reality (VR). The system implements an audience perception model controlling the nonverbal behaviors of virtual spectators, such as facial expressions or postures. Groups of virtual spectators are animated by a set of nonverbal behavior rules representing a particular audience attitude (e.g., indifferent or enthusiastic). Each rule specifies a nonverbal behavior category: posture, head movement, facial expression and gaze direction as well as three parameters: type, frequency and proportion. In a first user-study, we asked participants to pretend to be a speaker in VR and then create sets of nonverbal behaviour parameters to simulate different attitudes. Participants manipulated the nonverbal behaviours of single virtual spectator to match a specific levels of engagement and opinion toward them. In a second user-study, we used these parameters to design different types of virtual audiences with our nonverbal behavior rules and evaluated their perceptions. Our results demonstrate our system’s ability to create virtual audiences with three types of different perceived attitudes: indifferent, critical, enthusiastic. The analysis of the results also lead to a set of recommendations and guidelines regarding attitudes and expressions for future design of audiences for VR therapy and training applications. KW - virtual reality KW - perception KW - nonverbal behavior KW - interaction KW - virtual agent KW - virtual audience Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-259328 VL - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sonnenberg, Christoph A1 - Bannert, Maria T1 - Evaluating the Impact of Instructional Support Using Data Mining and Process Mining: A Micro-Level Analysis of the Effectiveness of Metacognitive Prompts JF - Journal of Educational Data Mining N2 - In computer-supported learning environments, the deployment of self-regulatory skills represents an essential prerequisite for successful learning. Metacognitive prompts are a promising type of instructional support to activate students’ strategic learning activities. However, despite positive effects in previous studies, there are still a large number of students who do not benefit from provided support. Therefore, it may be necessary to consider explicitly the conditions under which a prompt is beneficial for a student, i.e., so-called adaptive scaffolding. The current study aims to (i) classify the effectiveness of prompts on regulatory behavior, (ii) investigate the correspondence of the classification with learning outcome, and (iii) discover the conditions under which prompts induce regulatory activities (i.e., the proper temporal positioning of prompts). The think-aloud data of an experiment in which metacognitive prompts supported the experimental group (n = 35) was used to distinguish between effective and non-effective prompts. Students’ activities preceding the prompt presentation were analyzed using data mining and process mining techniques. The results indicate that approximately half of the presented prompts induced metacognitive learning activities as expected. Moreover, the number of induced monitoring activities correlates positively with transfer performance. Finally, the occurrence of orientation and monitoring activities, which are not well-embedded in the course of learning, increases the effectiveness of a presented prompt. In general, our findings demonstrate the benefits of investigating metacognitive support using process data, which can provide implications for the design of effective instructional support. KW - process mining KW - think-aloud data KW - metacognitive prompting KW - micro-level analysis KW - instructional support KW - self-regulated learning Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-152375 UR - http://www.educationaldatamining.org/JEDM/index.php/JEDM/article/view/JEDM2016-8-2-3 N1 - Dieser Artikel ist auch Bestandteil der Dissertation: Sonnenberg, Christoph: Analyzing Technology-Enhanced Learning Processes: What Can Process Mining Techniques Contribute to the Evaluation of Instructional Support?. - Würzburg, Univ., Diss., 2017. - [online]. URN: urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-152354 VL - 8 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hein, Rebecca M. A1 - Wienrich, Carolin A1 - Latoschik, Marc E. T1 - A systematic review of foreign language learning with immersive technologies (2001-2020) JF - AIMS Electronics and Electrical Engineering N2 - This study provides a systematic literature review of research (2001–2020) in the field of teaching and learning a foreign language and intercultural learning using immersive technologies. Based on 2507 sources, 54 articles were selected according to a predefined selection criteria. The review is aimed at providing information about which immersive interventions are being used for foreign language learning and teaching and where potential research gaps exist. The papers were analyzed and coded according to the following categories: (1) investigation form and education level, (2) degree of immersion, and technology used, (3) predictors, and (4) criterions. The review identified key research findings relating the use of immersive technologies for learning and teaching a foreign language and intercultural learning at cognitive, affective, and conative levels. The findings revealed research gaps in the area of teachers as a target group, and virtual reality (VR) as a fully immersive intervention form. Furthermore, the studies reviewed rarely examined behavior, and implicit measurements related to inter- and trans-cultural learning and teaching. Inter- and transcultural learning and teaching especially is an underrepresented investigation subject. Finally, concrete suggestions for future research are given. The systematic review contributes to the challenge of interdisciplinary cooperation between pedagogy, foreign language didactics, and Human-Computer Interaction to achieve innovative teaching-learning formats and a successful digital transformation. KW - foreign language learning and teaching KW - intercultural learning and teaching KW - immersive technologies KW - education KW - human-computer interaction KW - systematic literature review Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-268811 VL - 5 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pieger, Elisabeth A1 - Mengelkamp, Christoph A1 - Bannert, Maria T1 - Disfluency as a Desirable Difficulty — The Effects of Letter Deletion on Monitoring and Performance JF - Frontiers in Education N2 - Desirable difficulties initiate learning processes that foster performance. Such a desirable difficulty is generation, e.g., filling in deleted letters in a deleted letter text. Likewise, letter deletion is a manipulation of processing fluency: A deleted letter text is more difficult to process than an intact text. Disfluency theory also supposes that disfluency initiates analytic processes and thus, improves performance. However, performance is often not affected but, rather, monitoring is affected. The aim of this study is to propose a specification of the effects of disfluency as a desirable difficulty: We suppose that mentally filling in deleted letters activates analytic monitoring but not necessarily analytic cognitive processing and improved performance. Moreover, once activated, analytic monitoring should remain for succeeding fluent text. To test our assumptions, half of the students (n = 32) first learned with a disfluent (deleted letter) text and then with a fluent (intact) text. Results show no differences in monitoring between the disfluent and the fluent text. This supports our assumption that disfluency activates analytic monitoring that remains for succeeding fluent text. When the other half of the students (n = 33) first learned with a fluent and then with a disfluent text, differences in monitoring between the disfluent and the fluent text were found. Performance was significantly affected by fluency but in favor of the fluent texts, and hence, disfluency did not activate analytic cognitive processing. Thus, difficulties can foster analytic monitoring that remains for succeeding fluent text, but they do not necessarily improve performance. Further research is required to investigate how analytic monitoring can lead to improved cognitive processing and performance. KW - metacomprehension KW - disfluency KW - metacognitive monitoring KW - metacognitive control KW - metacognitive judgments KW - desirable difficulties Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-197179 SN - 2504-284X VL - 3 IS - 101 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Brill, Michael A1 - Schwab, Frank T1 - A mixed-methods approach using self-report, observational time series data, and content analysis for process analysis of a media reception phenomenon JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Due to the complexityof research objects, theoretical concepts, and stimuli in media research, researchers in psychology and communications presumably need sophisticated measures beyond self-report scales to answer research questions on media use processes. The present study evaluates stimulus-dependent structure in spontaneous eye-blink behavior as an objective, corroborative measure for the media use phenomenon of spatial presence. To this end, a mixed methods approach is used in an experimental setting to collect, combine, analyze, and interpret data from standardized participant self-report, observation of participant behavior, and content analysis of the media stimulus. T-pattern detection is used to analyze stimulus-dependent blinking behavior, and this structural data is then contrasted with self-report data. The combined results show that behavioral indicators yield the predicted results, while self-report data shows unpredicted results that are not predicted by the underlying theory. The use of a mixed methods approach offered insights that support further theory development and theory testing beyond a traditional, mono-method experimental approach. KW - presence KW - measurement KW - blinking KW - structure KW - mixed methods Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-201380 VL - 10 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Münchow, Hannes A1 - Mengelkamp, Christoph A1 - Bannert, Maria T1 - The better you feel the better you learn: do warm colours and rounded shapes enhance learning outcome in multimedia learning? JF - Education Research International N2 - The aim of the present study was to examine whether fostering positive activating affect during multimedia learning enhances learning outcome. University students were randomly assigned to either a multimedia learning environment designed to induce positive activating affect through the use of “warm” colours and rounded shapes () or an affectively neutral environment that used achromatic colours and sharp edges (). Participants learned about the topic of functional neuroanatomy for 20 minutes and had to answer several questions for comprehension and transfer afterwards. Affective states as well as achievement goal orientations were investigated before and after the learning phase using questionnaires. The results show that participants in the affectively positive environment were superior in comprehension as well as transfer when initial affect was strong. Preexperimental positive affect was therefore a predictor of comprehension and a moderator for transfer. Goal orientations did not influence these effects. The findings support the idea that positive affect, induced through the design of the particular multimedia learning environment, can facilitate performance if initial affective states are taken into account. KW - shape KW - learning outcome KW - multimedia learning KW - colour Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-158566 VL - 2017 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Döllinger, Nina A1 - Wolf, Erik A1 - Mal, David A1 - Wenninger, Stephan A1 - Botsch, Mario A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich A1 - Wienrich, Carolin T1 - Resize Me! Exploring the user experience of embodied realistic modulatable avatars for body image intervention in virtual reality JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - Obesity is a serious disease that can affect both physical and psychological well-being. Due to weight stigmatization, many affected individuals suffer from body image disturbances whereby they perceive their body in a distorted way, evaluate it negatively, or neglect it. Beyond established interventions such as mirror exposure, recent advancements aim to complement body image treatments by the embodiment of visually altered virtual bodies in virtual reality (VR). We present a high-fidelity prototype of an advanced VR system that allows users to embody a rapidly generated personalized, photorealistic avatar and to realistically modulate its body weight in real-time within a carefully designed virtual environment. In a formative multi-method approach, a total of 12 participants rated the general user experience (UX) of our system during body scan and VR experience using semi-structured qualitative interviews and multiple quantitative UX measures. Using body weight modification tasks, we further compared three different interaction methods for real-time body weight modification and measured our system’s impact on the body image relevant measures body awareness and body weight perception. From the feedback received, demonstrating an already solid UX of our overall system and providing constructive input for further improvement, we derived a set of design guidelines to guide future development and evaluation processes of systems supporting body image interventions. KW - virtual reality KW - avatar embodiment KW - user experience KW - body awareness KW - body weight perception KW - body weight modification KW - body image disturbance KW - eating and body weight disorders Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-292940 SN - 2673-4192 VL - 3 ER - TY - RPRT A1 - Nord, Ilona A1 - Ess, Charles A1 - Hurtienne, Jörn A1 - Schlag, Thomas T1 - Robotics in Christian Religious Practice Reflections on initial experiments in this field N2 - In this article we offer initial insights into the fairly new interdisciplinary and international domain of robotics in Christian religious practice. We are a group of scholars in media ethics, practical theology/religious education, and human computer interaction, who have been engaged in this discourse since 2017. A natural starting point is our study of BlessU2, a “blessing robot,” a device which received considerable recognition from the global public at the Wittenberg 500th reformation anniversary in 2017. We thus begin with the results of this study. Secondly, we will briefly address the relevant theses from Gabriele Trovato et al., as presented in their 2019 article on so-called theomorphic robots – followed by our interdisciplinary discussion of their approach. Finally, we draw conclusions for further work on the field of “religious robots.” Somewhat more carefully: Section 1 offers starting points within the perspectives of Christian religious practice: here, the blessing robot is both cause and occasion for doing religion and theologizing in the context of existential questions (1.1). We continue with perceptions in the field of religion regarding “Discursive Design Theory” (1.2). The interaction of humans with computers as posing questions for theological standardization of religious practice is focused upon in 1.3. Section 2 reconstructs the HRI/HCI-initiative to develop theomorphic robots in a twofold manner, i.e., the idea of developing theomorphic robots (2.1) and the concept of theomorphic robots: Questions and objections (2.2). In this part of the article we raise discussion points concerning the relationship between technology and religion and the need for sharpening the understanding of religion within the research field. Section 3 closes with propositions and alternatives. KW - Soziale Robotik KW - Christentum KW - Religious Practice KW - Robotics KW - Human Computer Interaction KW - BlessU2 Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-303149 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wienrich, Carolin A1 - Döllinger, Nina A1 - Hein, Rebecca T1 - Behavioral Framework of Immersive Technologies (BehaveFIT): How and why virtual reality can support behavioral change processes JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - The design and evaluation of assisting technologies to support behavior change processes have become an essential topic within the field of human-computer interaction research in general and the field of immersive intervention technologies in particular. The mechanisms and success of behavior change techniques and interventions are broadly investigated in the field of psychology. However, it is not always easy to adapt these psychological findings to the context of immersive technologies. The lack of theoretical foundation also leads to a lack of explanation as to why and how immersive interventions support behavior change processes. The Behavioral Framework for immersive Technologies (BehaveFIT) addresses this lack by 1) presenting an intelligible categorization and condensation of psychological barriers and immersive features, by 2) suggesting a mapping that shows why and how immersive technologies can help to overcome barriers and finally by 3) proposing a generic prediction path that enables a structured, theory-based approach to the development and evaluation of immersive interventions. These three steps explain how BehaveFIT can be used, and include guiding questions for each step. Further, two use cases illustrate the usage of BehaveFIT. Thus, the present paper contributes to guidance for immersive intervention design and evaluation, showing that immersive interventions support behavior change processes and explain and predict 'why' and 'how' immersive interventions can bridge the intention-behavior-gap. KW - immersive technologies KW - behavior change KW - intervention design KW - intervention evaluation KW - framework KW - virtual reality KW - intention-behavior-gap KW - human-computer interaction Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-258796 VL - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Herget, Ann-Kristin A1 - Bötzl, Franziska T1 - Sounds Like Respect. The Impact of Background Music on the Acceptance of Gay Men in Audio-Visual Advertising JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Companies increasingly seek to use gay protagonists in audio-visual commercials to attract a new affluent target group. There is also growing demand for the diversity present in society to be reflected in media formats such as advertising. Studies have shown, however, that heterosexual consumers (especially men), who may be part of the company's loyal consumer base, tend to react negatively to gay-themed advertising campaigns. Searching for an instrument to mitigate this unwanted effect, the present study investigated whether carefully selected background music can shape the perceived gender of gay male advertising protagonists. In a 2 × 2 between-subjects online experiment (musical connotation × gender of the participant), 218 heterosexual participants watched a commercial promoting engagement rings that featured gay male protagonists, scored with feminine- or masculine-connoted background music. As expected, women generally reacted more positively than men to the advertising. Men exposed to the masculine-connoted background music rated the promoted brand more positively, and masculine music also enhanced (at least in the short term) these men's acceptance of gay men in general (low and medium effect sizes) more than was the case for feminine background music. Carefully selected background music affecting the perceived gender of gay male advertising protagonists may prevent negative reactions from heterosexual audiences and, therefore, motivate companies to use gay protagonists in television commercials on a more regular basis. KW - music KW - perception KW - advertising KW - musical stereotypes KW - acceptance of gay men Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-237236 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 12 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Carolus, Astrid A1 - Wienrich, Carolin T1 - “Imagine this smart speaker to have a body”: An analysis of the external appearances and the characteristics that people associate with voice assistants JF - Frontiers in Computer Science N2 - Introduction Modern digital devices, such as conversational agents, simulate human–human interactions to an increasing extent. However, their outward appearance remains distinctly technological. While research revealed that mental representations of technology shape users' expectations and experiences, research on technology sending ambiguous cues is rare. Methods To bridge this gap, this study analyzes drawings of the outward appearance participants associate with voice assistants (Amazon Echo or Google Home). Results Human beings and (humanoid) robots were the most frequent associations, which were rated to be rather trustworthy, conscientious, agreeable, and intelligent. Drawings of the Amazon Echos and Google Homes differed marginally, but “human,” “robotic,” and “other” associations differed with respect to the ascribed humanness, consciousness, intellect, affinity to technology, and innovation ability. Discussion This study aims to further elaborate on the rather unconscious cognitive and emotional processes elicited by technology and discusses the implications of this perspective for developers, users, and researchers. KW - media equation KW - conversational agents KW - smart speakers KW - visualization of technology KW - embodiment Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-297175 SN - 2624-9898 VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Weber, Silvana A1 - Lorenz, Christopher A1 - Hemmings, Nicola T1 - Improving stress and positive mental health at work via an app-based intervention: a large-scale multi-center randomized control trial JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Mobile health interventions (i.e., “apps”) are used to address mental health and are an increasingly popular method available to both individuals and organizations to manage workplace stress. However, at present, there is a lack of research on the effectiveness of mobile health interventions in counteracting or improving stress-related health problems, particularly in naturalistic, non-clinical settings. This project aimed at validating a mobile health intervention (which is theoretically grounded in the Job Demands-Resources Model) in preventing and managing stress at work. Within the mobile health intervention, employees make an evidence-based, personalized, psycho-educational journey to build further resources, and thus, reduce stress. A large-scale longitudinal randomized control trial, conducted with six European companies over 6 weeks using four measurement points, examined indicators of mental health via measures of stress, wellbeing, resilience, and sleep. The data were analyzed by means of hierarchical multilevel models for repeated measures, including both self-report measures and user behavior metrics from the app. The results (n = 532) suggest that using the mobile health intervention (vs. waitlist control group) significantly improved stress and wellbeing over time. Higher engagement in the intervention increased the beneficial effects. Additionally, use of the sleep tracking function led to an improvement in sleeping troubles. The intervention had no effects on measures of physical health or social community at work. Theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed, focusing on benefits and challenges of using technological solutions for organizations to support individuals’ mental health in the workplace. KW - stress KW - work KW - RCT KW - mental health KW - digital health KW - mobile health intervention KW - smartphone app Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-194337 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 10 IS - 2745 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schwab, Frank A1 - Hennighausen, Christine A1 - Adler, Dorothea C. A1 - Carolus, Astrid T1 - Television Is Still “Easy” and Print Is Still “Tough”? More Than 30 Years of Research on the Amount of Invested Mental Effort JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - We provide a literature overview of 30 years of research on the amount of invested mental effort (AIME, Salomon, 1984), illuminating relevant literature in this field. Since the introduction of AIME, this concept appears to have vanished. To obtain a clearer picture of where the theory of AIME has diffused, we conducted a literature search focusing on the period 1985–2015. We examined scientific articles (N = 244) that cite Salomon (1984) and content-analyzed their keywords. Based on these keywords, we identified seven content clusters: affect and motivation, application fields, cognition and learning, education and teaching, media technology, learning with media technology, and methods. We present selected works of each content cluster and describe in which research field the articles had been published. Results indicate that AIME was most commonly (but not exclusively) referred to in the area of educational psychology indicating its importance regarding learning and education, thereby investigating print and TV, as well as new media. From a methodological perspective, research applied various research methods (e.g., longitudinal studies, experimental designs, theoretical analysis) and samples (e.g., children, college students, low income families). From these findings, the importance of AIME for further research is discussed. KW - AIME KW - amount of invested mental effort KW - literature review KW - content-analysis KW - content cluster Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-189965 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 9 IS - 1098 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Appel, Markus A1 - Marker, Caroline A1 - Mara, Martina T1 - Otakuism and the appeal of sex robots JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Social robots are becoming increasingly prevalent in everyday life and sex robots are a sub-category of especially high public interest and controversy. Starting from the concept of the otaku, a term from Japanese youth culture that describes secluded persons with a high affinity for fictional manga characters, we examine individual differences behind sex robot appeal (anime and manga fandom, interest in Japanese culture, preference for indoor activities, shyness). In an online-experiment, 261 participants read one out of three randomly assigned descriptions of future technologies (sex robot, nursing robot, genetically modified organism) and reported on their overall evaluation, eeriness, and contact/purchase intentions. Higher anime and manga fandom was associated with higher appeal for all three future technologies. For our male subsample, sex robots and GMOs stood out as shyness yielded a particularly strong relationship to contact/purchase intentions for these new technologies. KW - sex robots KW - anime KW - manga KW - fan culture KW - otakuism KW - shyness KW - uncanny valley Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-195893 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 10 IS - 569 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Palmisano, Chiara A1 - Kullmann, Peter A1 - Hanafi, Ibrahem A1 - Verrecchia, Marta A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich A1 - Canessa, Andrea A1 - Fischbach, Martin A1 - Isaias, Ioannis Ugo T1 - A fully-immersive virtual reality setup to study gait modulation JF - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience N2 - Objective: Gait adaptation to environmental challenges is fundamental for independent and safe community ambulation. The possibility of precisely studying gait modulation using standardized protocols of gait analysis closely resembling everyday life scenarios is still an unmet need. Methods: We have developed a fully-immersive virtual reality (VR) environment where subjects have to adjust their walking pattern to avoid collision with a virtual agent (VA) crossing their gait trajectory. We collected kinematic data of 12 healthy young subjects walking in real world (RW) and in the VR environment, both with (VR/A+) and without (VR/A-) the VA perturbation. The VR environment closely resembled the RW scenario of the gait laboratory. To ensure standardization of the obstacle presentation the starting time speed and trajectory of the VA were defined using the kinematics of the participant as detected online during each walking trial. Results: We did not observe kinematic differences between walking in RW and VR/A-, suggesting that our VR environment per se might not induce significant changes in the locomotor pattern. When facing the VA all subjects consistently reduced stride length and velocity while increasing stride duration. Trunk inclination and mediolateral trajectory deviation also facilitated avoidance of the obstacle. Conclusions: This proof-of-concept study shows that our VR/A+ paradigm effectively induced a timely gait modulation in a standardized immersive and realistic scenario. This protocol could be a powerful research tool to study gait modulation and its derangements in relation to aging and clinical conditions. KW - gait modulation KW - virtual reality KW - obstacle avoidance KW - gait analysis KW - kinematics Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-267099 SN - 1662-5161 VL - 16 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rudloff, Jan Philipp A1 - Hutmacher, Fabian A1 - Appel, Markus T1 - Beliefs about the nature of knowledge shape responses to the pandemic: Epistemic beliefs, the Dark Factor of Personality, and COVID‐19–related conspiracy ideation and behavior JF - Journal of Personality N2 - Objective Global challenges such as climate change or the COVID‐19 pandemic have drawn public attention to conspiracy theories and citizens' non‐compliance to science‐based behavioral guidelines. We focus on individuals' worldviews about how one can and should construct reality (epistemic beliefs) to explain the endorsement of conspiracy theories and behavior during the COVID‐19 pandemic and propose the Dark Factor of Personality (D) as an antecedent of post‐truth epistemic beliefs. Method and Results This model is tested in four pre‐registered studies. In Study 1 (N = 321), we found first evidence for a positive association between D and post‐truth epistemic beliefs (Faith in Intuition for Facts, Need for Evidence, Truth is Political). In Study 2 (N = 453), we tested the model proper by further showing that post‐truth epistemic beliefs predict the endorsement of COVID‐19 conspiracies and disregarding COVID‐19 behavioral guidelines. Study 3 (N = 923) largely replicated these results at a later stage of the pandemic. Finally, in Study 4 (N = 513), we replicated the results in a German sample, corroborating their cross‐cultural validity. Interactions with political orientation were observed. Conclusion Our research highlights that epistemic beliefs need to be taken into account when addressing major challenges to humankind. KW - conspiracy theories KW - COVID‐19 KW - Dark Factor of Personality KW - epistemic beliefs KW - post‐truth Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-293793 VL - 90 IS - 6 SP - 937 EP - 955 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hennighausen, Christine A1 - Hudders, Liselot A1 - Lange, Benjamin P. A1 - Fink, Hanna T1 - What If the Rival Drives a Porsche? Luxury Car Spending as a Costly Signal in Male Intrasexual Competition JF - Evolutionary Psychology N2 - Previous research found that men conspicuously consume luxury products to attract a mate and to signal their mate value. However, these studies have yet neglected to investigate the function of male conspicuous consumption in same-sex competition. Given that intersexual selection and intrasexual selection are closely related processes, it stands to reason that a further function of male conspicuous consumption could be to impress and deter same-sex rivals. An 2 (intrasexual competition context vs. control) × 2 (conspicuous luxury vs. inconspicuous nonluxury) between-subjects experimental study conducted with an Amazon Mechanical Turk sample (N = 160) revealed that men reported both higher liking of and an intent to purchase a conspicuous luxury car compared to an inconspicuous nonluxury car due to increased feelings of social status. This effect was stronger in the intrasexual competition than in the control context. An additional perception study using a single-factor between-subjects design (conspicuous luxury vs. inconspicuous nonluxury car) among German men (N = 405) indicated that male participants rated a man who displayed a conspicuous luxury car more as a rival and mate poacher and less as a friend. They further perceived him to be superior on various mate value characteristics (i.e., attractiveness, intelligence, ambition, and status) and rated him as more oriented toward short-term mating. In sum, our findings add to previous research in the field of evolutionary consumer psychology by suggesting that male conspicuous consumption of luxuries may also serve a function in male–male competition. KW - costly KW - dual function KW - intrasexual competition KW - men KW - luxury brands KW - conspicuous consumption KW - signaling KW - evolutionary consumer psychology Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-163481 VL - 14 IS - 4 ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Abendschein, Robin A1 - Desai, Shital A1 - Astell, Arlene J. T1 - Towards Accessibility Guidelines for the Metaverse : A Synthesis of Recommendations for People Living With Dementia T2 - Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI’23) : Workshop "Towards an Inclusive and Accessible Metaverse" N2 - Given the growing interest of corporate stakeholders in Metaverse applications, there is a need to understand accessibility of these technologies for marginalized populations such as people living with dementia to ensure inclusive design of Metaverse applications. We assessed the accessibility of extended reality technology for people living with mild cognitive impairment and dementia to develop accessibility guidelines for these technologies. We used four strategies to synthesize evidence for barriers and facilitators of accessibility: (1) Findings from a non-systematic literature review, (2) guidelines from well-researched technology, (3) exploration of selected mixed reality technologies, and (4) observations from four sessions and video data of people living with dementia using mixed reality technologies. We utilized template analysis to develop codes and themes towards accessibility guidelines. Future work can validate our preliminary findings by applying them on video recordings or testing them in experiments. KW - CHI Conference KW - Accessibility KW - Metaverse KW - extended reality KW - dementia KW - cognitive impairment KW - Human-centered computing / Access KW - Human-centered computing / Human computer interaction (HCI) / Interaction paradigms / Mixed / augmented reality KW - Human-centered computing / Human computer interaction (HCI) / Interaction paradigms / Virtual reality KW - Human-centered computing / Human computer interaction (HCI) / Interactiondevices KW - Human-centered computing / Human computerinteraction (HCI) / Interaction techniques Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-320199 UR - https://sites.google.com/view/accessiblemetaverse ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Breves, Priska A1 - Dodel, Nicola T1 - The influence of cybersickness and the media devices’ mobility on the persuasive effects of 360° commercials JF - Multimedia Tools and Applications N2 - With the rise of immersive media, advertisers have started to use 360° commercials to engage and persuade consumers. Two experiments were conducted to address research gaps and to validate the positive impact of 360° commercials in realistic settings. The first study (N = 62) compared the effects of 360° commercials using either a mobile cardboard head-mounted display (HMD) or a laptop. This experiment was conducted in the participants’ living rooms and incorporated individual feelings of cybersickness as a moderator. The participants who experienced the 360° commercial with the HMD reported higher spatial presence and product evaluation, but their purchase intentions were only increased when their reported cybersickness was low. The second experiment (N = 197) was conducted online and analyzed the impact of 360° commercials that were experienced with mobile (smartphone/tablet) or static (laptop/desktop) devices instead of HMDs. The positive effects of omnidirectional videos were stronger when participants used mobile devices. KW - virtual reality KW - immersive advertising KW - spatial presence KW - cybersickness KW - advertising effectiveness Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-269194 SN - 1573-7721 VL - 80 IS - 18 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Stein, Jan‐Philipp A1 - Yeo, Jiyeon T1 - Investigating meal‐concurrent media use: Social and dispositional predictors, intercultural differences, and the novel media phenomenon of “mukbang” eating broadcasts JF - Human Behavior and Emerging Technologies N2 - Meal-concurrent media use has been linked to several problematic outcomes, including higher caloric intake and an increased risk for obesity. Nevertheless, the sociocultural and dispositional predictors of using media while eating are not yet well-understood, including potential cross-cultural differences. Inspired by the recent emergence of a new food-related media phenomenon called “mukbang”—digital eating broadcasts that have become immensely popular throughout East and Southeast Asia—we inquire 296 participants from two cultures (Germany and South Korea) about their meal-concurrent media use. Our results suggest that South Koreans tend to use media more frequently during meals than Germans, especially for social purposes. Meanwhile, younger age only predicts meal-concurrent media use in the German sample. Apart from that, however, many other examined predictors (e.g., gender, living situation, body-esteem, the Big Five) remain statistically insignificant, indicating notable universality for the behavior in question. In the second part of our study, we then put special focus on the emerging mukbang trend and conduct a theory-driven exploration of its gratifications. Doing so, we find that participants' parasocial and social experiences during eating broadcasts significantly predict their enjoyment of the genre. KW - big five KW - body esteem KW - cross-cultural comparison KW - loneliness KW - parasocial relationship KW - meal-concurrent media use Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-257482 VL - 3 IS - 5 ER - TY - THES A1 - Winkler, Julia T1 - The Experience of Emotional Shifts as a Narrative Process: Investigating the Relationship of Emotional Shifts and Transportation and Their Roles in Narrative Persuasion T1 - Das Erleben von emotionalen Wechseln als narrativer Prozess: Untersuchung des Zusammenhangs zwischen emotional dynamischem Erleben von Geschichten und Transportation sowie ihrer Rolle im Kontext narrativer Persuasion N2 - Emotional shifts are often a fundamental part of the narrative experience and engrained into the schematic structures of stories. Recent theoretical work suggests that these shifts are key for narrative influence and are interconnected with transportation, a known mechanism of narrative effects. Empirical research examining this proposition is still scarce, inconclusive, and lacking measures that assess the experience of emotional shifts throughout a narrative to explain effects. This thesis aims to contribute to this research lacuna and investigates the link between emotional shifts, transportation, and story-consistent outcomes using different methods to measure emotional shifts in the moment they occur (Manuscript #1 and #2), and using various narrative stimuli (audiovisual, written, auditive). Manuscript #1 uses real-time-response (RTR) measurement to examine the relationship of valence shifts experienced during film viewing with transportation and post-exposure self-reported emotional flow. Manuscript #2 reports a pilot study and two experiments in which a self-probed emotional retrospection task is used to measure the number and intensity of emotional shifts during reading. I investigate the effect of reviews on transportation, the link between transportation and emotional shifts, and their respective associations with story-consistent attitudes, social sharing intentions, and donation behavior. In Manuscript #3, narrative structures are manipulated. Two experiments examine the effects of audio stories with shifting (positive-negative-positive) vs. positive-only emotional trajectories on the experience of happiness- and sadness-shifts, transportation, and post-exposure emotional flow. Transportation was positively linked to valence shifts (M#1), and the number and intensity of emotional shifts (M#2), and emotional flow (M#1, M#3). In M#3, transportation was predicted by shifts in happiness, but not sadness. Emotional flow was linked to shifts in happiness, sadness, and RTR valence (M#1, M#3). Emotional shifts and transportation were associated with social sharing intentions, but only transportation was linked to some story-consistent attitudes (affective attitudes in particular). N2 - Dynamisches emotionales Erleben ist oft charakteristisch für die Rezeption von Geschichten. Aktuelle theoretische Arbeiten postulieren, dass diese emotionalen Wechsel für den Einfluss von Narrationen entscheidend und mit Transportation, einem bekannten Mechanismus für narrative Wirkungen, verflochten sind. Empirische Evidenz zu dieser These ist noch rar, inkonsistent, und es kommt meist kein Prozessmaß emotionaler Wechsel zum Einsatz, um Effekte zu erklären. Die vorliegende Arbeit soll einen Beitrag zu dieser Forschungslücke leisten und untersucht den Zusammenhang zwischen emotionalen Wechseln, Transportation und persuasiven Wirkungen unter Verwendung verschiedener Stimuli (audiovisuell, schriftlich, auditiv) und Methoden zur Messung emotionaler Veränderungen im Moment ihres Auftretens (Manuskript 1 und 2). Manuskript #1 verwendet Real-Time-Response Messung (RTR) zur Untersuchung der Beziehung zwischen Valenzverschiebungen während der Filmrezeption, Transportation und retrospektiv selbstberichtetem Emotional Flow. Manuskript #2 berichtet eine Pilotstudie und zwei Experimente, die eine Self-Probed Emotional Retrospection Task zur Messung der Anzahl und Intensität emotionaler Wechsel während des Lesens verwenden. Die Experimente untersuchen die Wirkungen einer Rezensions-Manipulation auf Transportation sowie die Zusammenhänge zwischen Transportation, emotionalen Wechseln, Einstellungen, Absichten zum sozialen Teilen und Spendenverhalten. In Manuskript #3 werden Erzählstrukturen manipuliert. In zwei Experimenten werden die Wirkungen auditiver Geschichten mit wechselnden (positiv-negativ-positiv) bzw. nur positiven Strukturen auf erlebte Veränderungen von Freude und Trauer, Transportation, und Emotional Flow untersucht. Transportation stand in positivem Zusammenhang mit Valenzverschiebungen (M#1), der Anzahl und Intensität emotionaler Wechsel (M#2) und Emotional Flow (M#1, M#3). In M#3 wurde Transportation durch Veränderungen von Freude, aber nicht Trauer vorhergesagt. Emotional Flow war mit Veränderungen von Freude, Trauer und RTR-Valenzverschiebungen korreliert (M#1, M#3). Mehr und intensivere emotionale Wechsel und Transportation gingen mit einer erhöhten Absicht einher, Inhalte zu teilen bzw. über Inhalte zu reden. Nur Transportation war jedoch mit einigen der untersuchten (insbesondere affektiven) Einstellungen assoziiert. KW - Gefühl KW - Erzählung KW - Rezeptionsforschung KW - emotional shifts KW - emotion measurement KW - narrative effects KW - narrative persuasion KW - transportation KW - Medienwirkungsforschung KW - Massenmedien + Wirkung KW - Medien + Psychologie Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-321794 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich A1 - Wienrich, Carolin T1 - Congruence and plausibility, not presence: pivotal conditions for XR experiences and effects, a novel approach JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - Presence is often considered the most important quale describing the subjective feeling of being in a computer-generated and/or computer-mediated virtual environment. The identification and separation of orthogonal presence components, i.e., the place illusion and the plausibility illusion, has been an accepted theoretical model describing Virtual Reality (VR) experiences for some time. This perspective article challenges this presence-oriented VR theory. First, we argue that a place illusion cannot be the major construct to describe the much wider scope of virtual, augmented, and mixed reality (VR, AR, MR: or XR for short). Second, we argue that there is no plausibility illusion but merely plausibility, and we derive the place illusion caused by the congruent and plausible generation of spatial cues and similarly for all the current model’s so-defined illusions. Finally, we propose congruence and plausibility to become the central essential conditions in a novel theoretical model describing XR experiences and effects. KW - XR KW - experience KW - presence KW - congruence KW - plausibility KW - coherence KW - theory KW - prediction Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-284787 SN - 2673-4192 VL - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Krause, Stefan A1 - Weber, Silvana T1 - Lift me up by looking down: social comparison effects of narratives JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Stories are a powerful means to change recipients’ views on themselves by being transported into the story world and by identifying with story characters. Previous studies showed that recipients temporarily change in line with a story and its characters (assimilation). Conversely, assimilation might be less likely when recipients are less identified with story protagonists or less transported into a story by comparing themselves with a story character. This may lead to changes, which are opposite to a story and its characters (contrast). In two experiments, we manipulated transportation and experience taking via two written reviews (Experiment 1; N = 164) and by varying the perspective of the story’s narrator (Experiment 2; N = 79) of a short story about a negligent student. Recipients’ self-ratings in comparison to others, motives, and problem-solving behavior served as dependent variables. However, neither the review nor the perspective manipulation affected transportation or experience taking while reading the story. Against our expectations, highly transported recipients (in Study 1) and recipients with high experience taking (in Study 2) showed more persistency working on an anagram-solving task, even when controlling for trait conscientiousness. Our findings are critically discussed in light of previous research. KW - self KW - self-concept KW - transportation KW - identification KW - experience taking KW - narratives KW - social comparison Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-190624 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hutmacher, Fabian A1 - Kuhbandner, Christof T1 - Does the Attentional Boost Effect Depend on the Intentionality of Encoding? Investigating the Mechanisms Underlying Memory for Visual Objects Presented at Behaviorally Relevant Moments in Time JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Pictures in a rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) stream are better remembered when they are simultaneously presented with targets of an unrelated detection task than when they are presented with distractors. However, it is unclear whether this so-called “attentional boost effect” depends on the intentionality of encoding. While there are studies suggesting that the attentional boost effect even occurs when encoding is incidental, there are several methodological issues with these studies, which may have undermined the incidental encoding instructions. The present study (N = 141) investigated the role of the intentionality of encoding with an improved experimental design. Specifically, to prevent a spill-over of intentional resources to the pictures in the RSVP stream, the speed of the stream was increased (to four pictures per second) and each picture was presented only once during the course of the experiment. An attentional boost effect was only found when encoding was intentional but not when encoding was incidental. Interestingly, memory performance for incidentally encoded pictures was nevertheless substantially above chance, independently of whether images were presented with search-relevant targets or distractors. These results suggest that the attentional boost effect is a memory advantage that occurs only under intentional encoding conditions, and that perceptual long-term memory representations are formed as a natural product of perception, independently of the presence of behaviorally relevant events. KW - attentional boost effect KW - visual long-term memory KW - incidental encoding KW - intentional encoding KW - perceptual long-term memory Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-215902 VL - 11 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lange, Benjamin P. A1 - Andrian-Werburg, Maximilian T. P. von A1 - Adler, Dorothea C. A1 - Zaretsky, Eugen T1 - The name is the game: nicknames as predictors of personality and mating strategy in online dating JF - Frontiers in Communication N2 - Objective: We investigated the communicative function of online dating nicknames. Our aim was to assess if it is possible to correctly guess personality traits of a user simply by reading his/her nickname. Method: We had 69 nickname users (average age: 33.59 years, 36 female) complete questionnaires assessing their personality (Big 5 + narcissism) and mating strategy (short- vs. long-term). We then checked (using a total of 638 participants, average age: 26.83 years, 355 female), whether personality and mating strategy of the nickname users could be assessed correctly based only on the nickname. We also captured the motivation to contact the user behind a nickname and looked at linguistic features of the nicknames. Results: We found that personality and mating strategy could be inferred from a nickname. Furthermore, going by trends, women were better at intersexual personality judgments, whereas men were better in intrasexual judgements. We also found several correlates of the motivation to contact the person behind the nickname. Among other factors, long nicknames seemed to deter people from contacting the nickname user. Conclusions: Findings display that humans are capable of making accurate personality judgements in computer-mediated communication by means of even small cues like nicknames. KW - computer-mediated communication KW - linguistic cues KW - nicknames KW - online dating KW - personality judgments KW - hyperpersonal communication Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-201659 VL - 4 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wienrich, Carolin A1 - Carolus, Astrid A1 - Roth-Isigkeit, David A1 - Hotho, Andreas T1 - Inhibitors and enablers to explainable AI success: a systematic examination of explanation complexity and individual characteristics JF - Multimodal Technologies and Interaction N2 - With the increasing adaptability and complexity of advisory artificial intelligence (AI)-based agents, the topics of explainable AI and human-centered AI are moving close together. Variations in the explanation itself have been widely studied, with some contradictory results. These could be due to users’ individual differences, which have rarely been systematically studied regarding their inhibiting or enabling effect on the fulfillment of explanation objectives (such as trust, understanding, or workload). This paper aims to shed light on the significance of human dimensions (gender, age, trust disposition, need for cognition, affinity for technology, self-efficacy, attitudes, and mind attribution) as well as their interplay with different explanation modes (no, simple, or complex explanation). Participants played the game Deal or No Deal while interacting with an AI-based agent. The agent gave advice to the participants on whether they should accept or reject the deals offered to them. As expected, giving an explanation had a positive influence on the explanation objectives. However, the users’ individual characteristics particularly reinforced the fulfillment of the objectives. The strongest predictor of objective fulfillment was the degree of attribution of human characteristics. The more human characteristics were attributed, the more trust was placed in the agent, advice was more likely to be accepted and understood, and important needs were satisfied during the interaction. Thus, the current work contributes to a better understanding of the design of explanations of an AI-based agent system that takes into account individual characteristics and meets the demand for both explainable and human-centered agent systems. KW - explainable AI KW - human-centered AI KW - recommender agent KW - explanation complexity KW - individual differences Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-297288 SN - 2414-4088 VL - 6 IS - 12 ER - TY - THES A1 - Grundke, Andrea T1 - Head and Heart: On the Acceptability of Sophisticated Robots Based on an Enhancement of the Mind Perception Dichotomy and the Uncanny Valley of Mind T1 - Herz und Kopf: Zur Akzeptanz von elaborierten Robotern anhand einer Weiterentwicklung der Mind-Perception-Dichotomie und des Uncanny Valleys of Mind N2 - With the continuous development of artificial intelligence, there is an effort to let the expressed mind of robots resemble more and more human-like minds. However, just as the human-like appearance of robots can lead to feelings of aversion to such robots, recent research has shown that the apparent mind expressed by machines can also be responsible for their negative evaluations. This work strives to explore facets of aversion evoked by machines with human-like mind (uncanny valley of mind) within three empirical projects from a psychological point of view in different contexts, including the resulting consequences. In Manuscript #1, the perspective of previous work in the research area is reversed and thus shows that humans feel eeriness in response to robots that can read human minds, a capability unknown from human-human interaction. In Manuscript #2, it is explored whether empathy for a robot being harmed by a human is a way to alleviate the uncanny valley of mind. A result of this work worth highlighting is that aversion in this study did not arise from the manipulation of the robot’s mental capabilities but from its attributed incompetence and failure. The results of Manuscript #3 highlight that status threat is revealed if humans perform worse than machines in a work-relevant task requiring human-like mental capabilities, while higher status threat is linked with a higher willingness to interact, due to the machine’s perceived usefulness. In sum, if explanatory variables and concrete scenarios are considered, people will react fairly positively to machines with human-like mental capabilities. As long as the machine’s usefulness is palpable to people, but machines are not fully autonomous, people seem willing to interact with them, accepting aversion in favor of the expected benefits. N2 - Mit der stetigen Weiterentwicklung von künstlicher Intelligenz besteht das Bestreben, das ausgedrückte Bewusstsein von Robotern dem menschlichen Bewusstsein immer mehr nachzubilden. Die Forschung hat dargelegt, dass das augenscheinlich von Maschinen ausgedrückte Bewusstsein für negative Bewertungen verantwortlich sein kann (Uncanny Valley of Mind). Dieser Befund soll aus psychologischer Perspektive in verschiedenen Kontexten inklusive der daraus resultierenden Konsequenzen genauer betrachtet werden. Mit Manuskript #1 wird die Perspektive bisheriger Arbeiten in dem Forschungsgebiet umgekehrt und gezeigt, dass Menschen Unheimlichkeit gegenüber Robotern empfinden, die scheinbar menschliche Gedanken lesen können, was aus der Mensch-Mensch-Interaktion unbekannt ist. In Manuskript #2 wird der Frage nachgegangen, ob Empathie für einen von einem Menschen verletzt werdenden Roboter eine Möglichkeit ist, das Uncanny Valley of Mind abzuschwächen. Ein hervorzuhebendes Resultat dieser Arbeit ist, dass Aversion in dieser Studie nicht durch die Manipulation der Bewusstseinszustände des Roboters aufgekommen ist, sondern durch dessen attribuierte Inkompetenz und sein Versagen. Die Ergebnisse von Manuskript #3 zeigen, dass Statusbedrohung auftritt, wenn Menschen bei einer arbeitsrelevanten Aufgabe, die menschenähnliche mentale Fähigkeiten erfordert, schlechter abschneiden als Maschinen. Es wird auf die wahrgenommene Nützlichkeit der Maschine Bezug genommen um zu erklären, dass höhere Statusbedrohung mit höherer Bereitschaft zur Interaktion assoziiert ist. Zusammenfassend reagieren Menschen recht positiv auf Maschinen mit menschenähnlichen mentalen Fähigkeiten, sobald erklärende Variablen und konkrete Szenarien mitberücksichtigt werden. Solange die Nützlichkeit der Maschinen deutlich gemacht wird, diese aber nicht vollkommen autonom sind, scheinen Menschen gewillt zu sein, mit diesen zu interagieren und dabei Gefühle von Aversion zugunsten der antizipierten Vorteile in Kauf zu nehmen. KW - Humanoider Roboter KW - Künstliche Intelligenz KW - Mensch-Maschine-Kommunikation KW - Uncanny Valley of Mind KW - Eeriness KW - Empathy KW - Status Threat KW - Perceived Usefulness KW - Mensch-Maschine-Interaktion Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-330152 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Grundgeiger, Tobias A1 - Ertle, Franz A1 - Diethei, Daniel A1 - Mengelkamp, Christoph A1 - Held, Volker T1 - Improving procedural skills acquisition of students during medical device training: experiments on e-Learning vs. e-Learning with hands-on JF - Advances in Health Sciences Education N2 - In the context of medical device training, e-Learning can address problems like unstandardized content and different learning paces. However, staff and students value hands-on activities during medical device training. In a blended learning approach, we examined whether using a syringe pump while conducting an e-Learning program improves the procedural skills needed to operate the pump compared to using the e-Learning program only. In two experiments, the e-Learning only group learned using only the e-Learning program. The e-Learning + hands-on group was instructed to use a syringe pump during the e-Learning to repeat the presented content (section “Experiment 1”) or to alternate between learning on the e-Learning program and applying the learned content using the pump (section “Experiment 2”). We conducted a skills test, a knowledge test, and assessed confidence in using the pump immediately after learning and two weeks later. Simply repeating the content (section “Experiment 1”) did not improve performance of e-Learning + hands-on compared with e-Learning only. The instructed learning process (section “Experiment 1”) resulted in significantly better skills test performance for e-Learning + hands-on compared to the e-Learning only. Only a structured learning process based on multi-media learning principles and memory research improved procedural skills in relation to operating a medical device. KW - clinical skills KW - e-Learning KW - blended learning KW - education KW - medical device training Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-324477 VL - 28 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hutmacher, Fabian A1 - Mayrhofer, Roland T1 - Psychology as a historical science? Theoretical assumptions, methodological considerations, and potential pitfalls JF - Current Psychology N2 - The current condition of (Western) academic psychology can be criticized for various reasons. In the past years, many debates have been centered around the so-called “replication crisis” and the “WEIRD people problem”. However, one aspect which has received relatively little attention is the fact that psychological research is typically limited to currently living individuals, while the psychology of the past remains unexplored. We find that more research in the field of historical psychology is required to capture both the similarities and differences between psychological mechanisms both then and now. We begin by outlining the potential benefits of understanding psychology also as a historical science and explore these benefits using the example of stress. Finally, we consider methodological, ideological, and practical pitfalls, which could endanger the attempt to direct more attention toward cross-temporal variation. Nevertheless, we suggest that historical psychology would contribute to making academic psychology a truly universal endeavor that explores the psychology of all humans. KW - historical psychology KW - history of psychology KW - replication crisis KW - methodological pluralism Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-324491 SN - 1046-1310 VL - 42 IS - 22 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hohm, Anna A1 - Happel, Oliver A1 - Hurtienne, Jörn A1 - Grundgeiger, Tobias T1 - User experience in safety–critical domains: a survey on motivational orientations and psychological need satisfaction in acute care JF - Cognition, Technology & Work N2 - The relevance of user experience in safety–critical domains has been questioned and lacks empirical investigation. Based on previous studies examining user experience in consumer technology, we conducted an online survey on positive experiences with interactive technology in acute care. The participants of the study consisted of anaesthesiologists, nurses, and paramedics (N = 55) from three German cities. We report qualitative and quantitative data examining (1) the relevance and notion of user experience, (2) motivational orientations and psychological need satisfaction, and (3) potential correlates of hedonic, eudaimonic, and extrinsic motivations such as affect or meaning. Our findings reveal that eudaimonia was the most salient aspect in these experiences and that the relevance of psychological needs is differently ranked than in experiences with interactive consumer technology. We conclude that user experience should be considered in safety–critical domains, but research needs to develop further tools and methods to address the domain-specific requirements. KW - user experience KW - healthcare KW - eudaimonia KW - hedonia KW - need satisfaction KW - meaning Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-324486 SN - 1435-5558 VL - 24 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wienrich, Carolin A1 - Carolus, Astrid A1 - Markus, André A1 - Augustin, Yannik A1 - Pfister, Jan A1 - Hotho, Andreas T1 - Long-term effects of perceived friendship with intelligent voice assistants on usage behavior, user experience, and social perceptions JF - Computers N2 - Social patterns and roles can develop when users talk to intelligent voice assistants (IVAs) daily. The current study investigates whether users assign different roles to devices and how this affects their usage behavior, user experience, and social perceptions. Since social roles take time to establish, we equipped 106 participants with Alexa or Google assistants and some smart home devices and observed their interactions for nine months. We analyzed diverse subjective (questionnaire) and objective data (interaction data). By combining social science and data science analyses, we identified two distinct clusters—users who assigned a friendship role to IVAs over time and users who did not. Interestingly, these clusters exhibited significant differences in their usage behavior, user experience, and social perceptions of the devices. For example, participants who assigned a role to IVAs attributed more friendship to them used them more frequently, reported more enjoyment during interactions, and perceived more empathy for IVAs. In addition, these users had distinct personal requirements, for example, they reported more loneliness. This study provides valuable insights into the role-specific effects and consequences of voice assistants. Recent developments in conversational language models such as ChatGPT suggest that the findings of this study could make an important contribution to the design of dialogic human–AI interactions. KW - intelligent voice assistant KW - smart speaker KW - social relationship KW - social role KW - long-term analysis KW - social interaction KW - human–computer interaction KW - anthropomorphism Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-313552 SN - 2073-431X VL - 12 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Stein, Jan-Philipp A1 - Cimander, Paula A1 - Appel, Markus T1 - Power-posing robots: the influence of a humanoid robot’s posture and size on its perceived dominance, competence, eeriness, and threat JF - International Journal of Social Robotics N2 - When interacting with sophisticated digital technologies, people often fall back on the same interaction scripts they apply to the communication with other humans—especially if the technology in question provides strong anthropomorphic cues (e.g., a human-like embodiment). Accordingly, research indicates that observers tend to interpret the body language of social robots in the same way as they would with another human being. Backed by initial evidence, we assumed that a humanoid robot will be considered as more dominant and competent, but also as more eerie and threatening once it strikes a so-called power pose. Moreover, we pursued the research question whether these effects might be accentuated by the robot’s body size. To this end, the current study presented 204 participants with pictures of the robot NAO in different poses (expansive vs. constrictive), while also manipulating its height (child-sized vs. adult-sized). Our results show that NAO’s posture indeed exerted strong effects on perceptions of dominance and competence. Conversely, participants’ threat and eeriness ratings remained statistically independent of the robot’s depicted body language. Further, we found that the machine’s size did not affect any of the measured interpersonal perceptions in a notable way. The study findings are discussed considering limitations and future research directions. KW - robot KW - humanoid KW - embodiment KW - body language KW - posture KW - nonverbal communication Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-324502 SN - 1875-4791 VL - 14 IS - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hruschka, Timon M. J. A1 - Appel, Markus T1 - Learning about informal fallacies and the detection of fake news: an experimental intervention JF - PLoS One N2 - The philosophical concept of informal fallacies–arguments that fail to provide sufficient support for a claim–is introduced and connected to the topic of fake news detection. We assumed that the ability to identify informal fallacies can be trained and that this ability enables individuals to better distinguish between fake news and real news. We tested these assumptions in a two-group between-participants experiment (N = 116). The two groups participated in a 30-minute-long text-based learning intervention: either about informal fallacies or about fake news. Learning about informal fallacies enhanced participants’ ability to identify fallacious arguments one week later. Furthermore, the ability to identify fallacious arguments was associated with a better discernment between real news and fake news. Participants in the informal fallacy intervention group and the fake news intervention group performed equally well on the news discernment task. The contribution of (identifying) informal fallacies for research and practice is discussed. KW - learning KW - human learning KW - reasoning KW - social media KW - psychology KW - psychometrics KW - social psychology KW - statistical data Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-350404 SN - 1932-6203 VL - 18 IS - 3 ER - TY - THES A1 - Schneider, Florian Alexander T1 - Voice Assistants are Social Actors – An Empirical Analysis of Media Equation Effects in Human-Voice Assistant Interaction T1 - Sprachassistenten als soziale Akteure - Eine empirische Untersuchung von Media Equation Effekten in der Mensch-Sprachassistenten Interaktion N2 - Ownership and usage of personal voice assistant devices like Amazon Echo or Google Home have increased drastically over the last decade since their market launch. This thesis builds upon existing computers are social actors (CASA) and media equation research that is concerned with humans displaying social reactions usually exclusive to human-human interaction when interacting with media and technological devices. CASA research has been conducted with a variety of technological devices such as desktop computers, smartphones, embodied virtual agents, and robots. However, despite their increasing popularity, little empirical work has been done to examine social reactions towards these personal stand-alone voice assistant devices, also referred to as smart speakers. Thus, this dissertation aims to adopt the CASA approach to empirically evaluate social responses to smart speakers. With this goal in mind, four laboratory experiments with a total of 407 participants have been conducted for this thesis. Results show that participants display a wide range of social reactions when interacting with voice assistants. This includes the utilization of politeness strategies such as the interviewer-bias, which led to participants giving better evaluations directly to a smart speaker device compared to a separate computer. Participants also displayed prosocial behavior toward a smart speaker after interdependence and thus a team affiliation had been induced. In a third study, participants applied gender stereotypes to a smart speaker not only in self-reports but also exhibited conformal behavior patterns based on the voice the device used. In a fourth and final study, participants followed the rule of reciprocity and provided help to a smart speaker device that helped them in a prior interaction. This effect was also moderated by subjects’ personalities, indicating that individual differences are relevant for CASA research. Consequently, this thesis provides strong empirical support for a voice assistants are social actors paradigm. This doctoral dissertation demonstrates the power and utility of this research paradigm for media psychological research and shows how considering voice assistant devices as social actors lead to a more profound understanding of voice-based technology. The findings discussed in this thesis also have implications for these devices that need to be carefully considered both in future research as well as in practical design. N2 - Die Verbreitung und Nutzung von persönlichen Sprachassistenten wie Amazon Echo oder Google Home haben seit deren Veröffentlichung im Laufe des letzten Jahrzehnts stark zugenommen. Diese Thesis baut auf existierender computers are social actors (CASA) und media equation Forschung auf, die sich mit sozialen Reaktionen auf Medien und technologische Geräte befasst, die normalerweise nur in der Mensch-Mensch Interaktion auftreten. CASA Forschung wurde bereits zu einer Bandbreite an technologischen Geräten durchgeführt, darunter Desktopcomputer, Smartphones, virtuelle Agenten und Roboter. Trotz ihrer zunehmenden Popularität wurde bisher wenig empirische Forschung zu sozialen Reaktionen auf Geräte wie die genannten Sprachassistenten, auch Smart Speaker genannt, durchgeführt. Deshalb ist es das Ziel dieser Dissertation, soziale Reaktionen auf Smart Speaker basierend auf dem CASA Ansatz empirisch zu evaluieren. Zu diesem Zweck wurden im Rahmen dieser Thesis vier Laborexperimente mit insgesamt 407 TeilnehmerInnen durchgeführt. Die Ergebnisse machen deutlich, dass Nutzer eine Bandbreite an sozialen Reaktionen in der Interaktion mit Sprachassistenten zeigen. Darunter die Verwendung von Höflichkeitsstrategien wie des Interviewer-Bias, was zu besseren Bewertungen eines Smart Speakers geführt hat, wenn dieser direkt am Gerät selbst bewertet wurde. Im Vergleich dazu fielen Bewertungen, die an einem separaten Computer abgegeben wurden, schlechter aus. Die TeilnehmerInnen zeigten außerdem prosoziales Verhalten gegenüber einem Sprachassistenten, nachdem eine Interdependenz und Teamzugehörigkeit induziert wurde. In einer dritten Studie wandten die TeilnehmerInnen Geschlechterstereotype auf Sprachassistenten an, basierend nur auf der Stimme, die das Gerät in der Interaktion verwendet hatte. Dies zeige sich sowohl in einer Bewertung des Geräts als auch durch konforme Verhaltensmuster. In einer vierten und letzten Studie zeigten die TeilnehmerInnen reziprokes Verhalten und halfen einem Smart Speaker Gerät, das ihnen zuvor bereits geholfen hatte. Dieser Effekt wurde außerdem durch die Persönlichkeit der TeilnehmerInnen moderiert, was ein starkes Indiz dafür liefert, dass individuelle Unterschiede relevant für die CASA Forschung sind. Folglich liefert diese Dissertation starke empirische Belege für ein voice assistants are social actors Paradigma. Sie demonstriert die Nützlichkeit dieses Paradigmas für medienpsychologische Forschung und wie die Betrachtung von Smart Speaker Geräten als soziale Akteure zu einem vertieften Verständnis von sprachbasierten Technologien führen kann. Die Ergebnisse, die in dieser Dissertation diskutiert werden, haben Implikationen sowohl für zukünftige Forschung als auch für das praktische Design von Sprachassistenten. KW - Mensch-Maschine-Kommunikation KW - Media Equation KW - Voice Assistants KW - Human-Computer-Interaction Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-346704 ER -