Frequently interrupting someone who is busy will decrease his or her productivity. To minimize this risk, a number of interruptibility estimation methods based on PC activity such as typing or mouse clicks have been developed. However, these estimation methods do not take account of the effect of conversations in relation to the interruptibility of office workers engaged in intellectual activities such as scientific research. This study proposes an interruptibility estimation method that takes account of the conversation status. Two conversation indices, "In conversation" and "End of conversation" were used in a method that we developed based on our analysis of 50 hours worth of recorded activity. Experiments, using the conversation status as judged by the Wizard-of-OZ method, demonstrated that the estimation accuracy can be improved by the two indices. Furthermore, an automatic conversation status recognition system was developed to replace theWizard-of-OZ procedure. The results of using it for interruptibility estimation suggest the effectiveness of the automatically recognized conversation status.
CITATION STYLE
Hashimoto, S., Tanaka, T., Aoki, K., & Fujita, K. (2014). Improvement of interruptibility estimation during PC work by reflecting conversation status. In IEICE Transactions on Information and Systems (Vol. E97D, pp. 3171–3180). Maruzen Co., Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1587/transinf.2014EDP7097
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