Jie Tsai’s research while affiliated with University of Texas at Austin and other places

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Publications (5)


"I Want Lower Tone for Work-Related Notifications": Exploring the Effectiveness of User-Assigned Notification Alerts in Improving User Speculation of and Attendance to Mobile Notifications
  • Article

September 2024

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22 Reads

Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction

Tang-Jie Chang

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Li-Ting Su

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[...]

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Research indicates that smartphone users often speculate about notifications upon sensing their arrival, aiding their decision to attend to them. This speculation, however, relies on the presence of sufficient clues to associate with the notification, which are not always available. To address this challenge, through an experience sampling study, we investigated the effectiveness of delivering user-assigned alerts in influencing users' speculation accuracy, attendance effectiveness, and perceived disturbance. Our findings suggest that while user-assigned alerts enhanced the accuracy of speculation and improved participants' decisions to attend to notifications, the increased notification awareness sometimes led participants to view their decision to ignore notifications as less favorable. Moreover, we found that sporadic alert delivery disrupted the association between the alert and the notification, leading to no reduction in perceived disturbance nor improvement in speculation accuracy. In assigning alerts to notifications, participants considered five strategies: familiarity, distinctiveness, disturbance, emotional resonance, and dimension representation.


I Like Their Autonomy and Closeness to Me: Uncovering the Perceived Appeal of Social-Media Influencers
  • Conference Paper
  • Full-text available

April 2023

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512 Reads

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3 Citations

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Figure 1: Images of travel multitaskers engaged in travel multitasking on diferent modes of public transit
Get Distracted or Missed the Stop? Investigating Public Transit Passengers’ Travel-Based Multitasking Behaviors, Motives, and Challenges

April 2023

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158 Reads

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3 Citations


Are You Killing Time? Predicting Smartphone Users’ Time-killing Moments via Fusion of Smartphone Sensor Data and Screenshots

April 2023

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103 Reads

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9 Citations


Citations (1)


... Second, people bring many different intentions to their app use, and prior work suggests a user's motivation for using their phone may influence whether they later regret doing so [20,28]. For instance, earlier studies have shown that users often turn to mobile apps to kill time during moments of idle attention [4,39,50,54], typically without a clear purpose. It is plausible that users' sense of regret after such mindless use differs from their feelings after engaging with the same app for specific, goal-directed tasks, such as communicating with a friend or seeking information. ...

Reference:

Using Screenshot Data to Examine the Phone Use People Regret
Are You Killing Time? Predicting Smartphone Users’ Time-killing Moments via Fusion of Smartphone Sensor Data and Screenshots