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FORTNIoT: Intelligible Predictions to Improve User Understanding of Smart Home Behavior

Tijdschriftbijdrage - Tijdschriftartikel

Fig. 1. Based on self-sustaining predictions (e.g. the sun will set), FORTNIoT can deduce when trigger-condition-action rules (e.g. IF sun set AND anyone home THEN lower the rolling shutter) will trigger in the near future and what effects they will cause (e.g. the rolling shutter will lower). Ubiquitous environments, such as smart homes, are becoming more intelligent and autonomous. As a result, their behavior becomes harder to grasp and unintended behavior becomes more likely. Researchers have contributed tools to better understand and validate an environments' past behavior (e.g. logs, end-user debugging), and to prevent unintended behavior. There is, however, a lack of tools that help users understand the future behavior of such an environment. Information about the actions it will perform, and why it will perform them, remains concealed. In this paper, we contribute FORTNIoT, a well-defined approach that combines self-sustaining predictions (e.g. weather forecasts) and simulations of trigger-condition-action rules to deduce when these rules will trigger in the future and what state changes they will cause to connected smart home entities. We implemented a proof-of-concept of this approach, as well as a visual demonstrator that shows such predictions, including causes and effects, in an overview of a smart home's behavior. A between-subject evaluation with 42 participants indicates that FORTNIoT predictions lead to a more accurate understanding of the future behavior, more confidence in that understanding, and more appropriate trust in what the system will (not) do. We envision a wide variety of situations where predictions about the future are beneficial to inhabitants of smart homes, such as debugging unintended behavior and managing conflicts by exception, and hope to spark a new generation of intelligible tools for ubiquitous environments.
Tijdschrift: Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive Mobile Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies-IMWUT
ISSN: 2474-9567
Issue: 4
Volume: 4
Pagina's: null24
Jaar van publicatie:2020
Trefwoorden:CCS Concepts: • Human-centered computing → Graphical user interfaces, Interaction paradigms, HCI theory, con- cepts and models, Interaction design theory, concepts and paradigms, User interface toolkits Additional Key Words and Phrases: Intelligibility, Scrutability, Internet-of-Things, Smart Homes, Simulations, Predictions
BOF-keylabel:ja
Toegankelijkheid:Open