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KinVoices: Using Voices of Friends and Family in Voice Interfaces

Samantha Chan, Tamil Selvan Gunasekaran, Yun Suen Pai, Haimo Zhang, Suranga Nanayakkara

2021Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction31 citationsDOI

Abstract

With voice user interfaces (VUIs) becoming ubiquitous and speech synthesis technology maturing, it is possible to synthesise voices to resemble our friends and relatives (which we will collectively call 'kin') and use them on VUIs. However, designing such interfaces and investigating how the familiarity of kin voices affect user perceptions remain under-explored. Our surveys and interviews with 25 users revealed that VUIs using kin voices were perceived as more engaging, persuasive and safer yet eerier than VUIs using common virtual assistant voices. We then developed a technology probe, KinVoice, an Alexa-based VUI that was deployed in three households over two weeks. Users set reminders using KinVoice, which in turn, gave the reminders in synthesised kin voices. This was to explore users' needs, uncover challenges involved and inspire new applications. We discuss design guidelines for integrating familiar kin voices into VUIs, applications that benefit from its usage, and implications for balancing voice realism and usability with security and diversification.

Topics & Concepts

UsabilitySAFERPerceptionInternet privacyAffect (linguistics)Set (abstract data type)Computer scienceHuman–computer interactionPsychologyCommunicationComputer securityNeuroscienceProgramming languageAI in Service InteractionsSocial Robot Interaction and HRISpeech and dialogue systems
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