Litcius/Paper detail

Feeling the Temperature of the Room

Luke Haliburton, Svenja Yvonne Schött, Linda Hirsch, Robin Welsch, Albrecht Schmidt

2023Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive Mobile Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Thermal signals have been explored in HCI for emotion-elicitation and enhancing two-person communication, showing that temperature invokes social and emotional signals in individuals. Yet, extending these findings to group communication is missing. We investigated how thermal signals can be used to communicate group affective states in a hybrid meeting scenario to help people feel connected over a distance. We conducted a lab study (N=20 participants) and explored wrist-worn thermal feedback to communicate audience emotions. Our results show that thermal feedback is an effective method of conveying audience engagement without increasing workload and can help a presenter feel more in tune with the audience. We outline design implications for real-world wearable social thermal feedback systems for both virtual and in-person communication that support group affect communication and social connectedness. Thermal feedback has the potential to connect people across distances and facilitate more effective and dynamic communication in multiple contexts.

Topics & Concepts

FeelingSocial connectednessPsychologyAffect (linguistics)Human–computer interactionWearable computerComputer scienceSocial psychologyMultimediaCommunicationEmbedded systemVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsInnovative Human-Technology InteractionAction Observation and Synchronization
Feeling the Temperature of the Room | Litcius