Litcius/Paper detail

SSpoon

Yang Chen, Katherine Fennedy, Anna Fogel, Shengdong Zhao, Chao Zhang, Lijuan Liu, Ching Chiuan Yen

2022Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive Mobile Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

One key strategy of combating obesity is to slow down eating; however, this is difficult to achieve due to people's habitual nature. In this paper, we explored the feasibility of incorporating shape-changing interface into an eating spoon to directly intervene in undesirable eating behaviour. First, we investigated the optimal dimension (i.e., Z-depth) and ideal range of spoon transformation for different food forms that could affect bite size while maintaining usability. Those findings allowed the development of SSpoon prototype through a series of design explorations that are optimised for user's adoption. Then, we applied two shape-changing strategies: instant transformations based on food forms and subtle transformations based on food intake) and examined in two comparative studies involving a full course meal using Wizard-of-Oz approach. The results indicated that SSpoon could achieve comparable effects to a small spoon (5ml) in reducing eating rate by 13.7-16.1% and food consumption by 4.4-4.6%, while retaining similar user satisfaction as a normal eating spoon (10ml). These results demonstrate the feasibility of a shape-changing eating utensil as a promising alternative to combat the growing concern of obesity.

Topics & Concepts

UsabilityComputer scienceAffect (linguistics)PsychologyDimension (graph theory)MealHuman–computer interactionSocial psychologyFood scienceMathematicsCommunicationChemistryPure mathematicsInteractive and Immersive DisplaysColor perception and designConsumer Perception and Purchasing Behavior