5th International ICST Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Systems: Computing, Networking and Services

Research Article

Demonstration of a mobility-enhanced pedestrian navigation on mobile devices

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/ICST.MOBIQUITOUS2008.4194 ,
        author={Tetsuo  Yamabe and Kiyotaka  Takahashi and Tatsuo  Nakajima},
        title={Demonstration of a mobility-enhanced pedestrian navigation on mobile devices},
        proceedings={5th International ICST Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Systems: Computing, Networking and Services},
        publisher={ICST},
        proceedings_a={MOBIQUITOUS},
        year={2010},
        month={5},
        keywords={mobile computers interaction style interface design},
        doi={10.4108/ICST.MOBIQUITOUS2008.4194 }
    }
    
  • Tetsuo Yamabe
    Kiyotaka Takahashi
    Tatsuo Nakajima
    Year: 2010
    Demonstration of a mobility-enhanced pedestrian navigation on mobile devices
    MOBIQUITOUS
    ICST
    DOI: 10.4108/ICST.MOBIQUITOUS2008.4194
Tetsuo Yamabe1,2,*, Kiyotaka Takahashi1,3,*, Tatsuo Nakajima4,*
  • 1: Nokia Research Center, Nokia Japan Co.,Ltd, Tokyo, Japan.
  • 2: Department of Computer Science, Waseda University.
  • 3: Graduate School of Information Science and Engineering, Tokyo Institute of Technology.
  • 4: Dept. of Computer Science, Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan.
*Contact email: tetsuo.yamabe@nokia.com, kiyotaka.takahashi@nokia.com, tatsuo@dcl.info.waseda.ac.jp

Abstract

Current mobile interaction is not well designed with considering mobility. Even though user attention is an important human factor for user interface design, current mobile service is too attention-consuming for moving users to perform tasks. This is because mobile service is still pursuing desktop-miniaturization trend, and it is designed to work in stationary situations (e.g. "sitting on a chair", "standing on a street"). It makes mobile services not truly helpful in real mobile environments, since such situations are ideal and most of the time mobile users are in action while on the move.

In this paper, we propose a dual-mode approach to design mobile services. Our approach aims to decrease a user's cognitive load by enabling users to retrieve information with less attention. The dual-mode approach provides a simplified interaction style (named simple interaction mode) to a mobile service, in addition to a conventional user interface (named normal interaction mode). While some of research activities aim to realize unobtrusive user interfaces for moving users, their advantages from conventional user interfaces have not been sufficiently evaluated. Therefore, we have prototyped a pedestrian navigation service in order to clarify feasibility of our approach.