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Proxemics of screen mediation: engagement with reading on screen manifests as diminished variation due to self-control, rather than diminished mean distance from screen

Authors :
Witchel, Harry J
Santos, Carlos P
Ackah, James K
Chockalingam, Nachiappan
Westling, Carina E I
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Communication Institute for Online Scholarship, 2020.

Abstract

Objective: Burgoon's theory of conversational involvement suggest that when people engage with a person, they will move slightly closer to them, often subtly and subconsciously. However, some studies have failed to extend this to human-computer interaction. Our hypothesis is that during online reading, engagement is associated with an expenditure of effort to hold the head upright, still and centrally. \ud \ud Method: We presented to 27 participants (ages 21.00 ± 2.89, 15 female) seated in front of 47.5x27 cm monitor two reading stimuli in a counterbalanced order, one (interesting) based on a best selling novel and the other (boring) based on European Union banking regulations. The participants were video-recorded during their reading while they wore reflective motion tracking markers. The markers were video-tracked off-line using Kinovea 0.8. \ud \ud Results: Subjective VAS ratings showed that the stimuli elicited the bored and interested states as expected. Video tracking showed that the boring stimulus (compared to the interesting reading) elicited a greater head-to-screen velocity, a greater head-to-screen distance range, a greater head-to-screen distance standard deviation, but not a further away head-to-screen mean distance.\ud \ud Conclusions: The more interesting reading led to efforts to control the head to a more central viewing position while suppressing head fidgeting.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11835656
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....9338489014a6389ac530e17e7bd1ab79