Title :
Comparison of touch and speech-enabled IVR systems in low literacy users
Author :
Ndwe, T. Jama ; Dlodlo, Mqhele ; Nichols, Jeffery
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Univ. of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa
Abstract :
This paper addresses the feasibility of using the telephone as a tool for information access in the technology challenged and illiterate communities of Southern Africa. We did a case study of the OpenPhone system in the context of caregivers for HIV/AIDS infected children in Botswana. The aim was to design an IVR system for delivering care-giving health information in Setswana using a normal telephone. The study compares DTMF and speech-enabled IVR systems. The targeted users are predominantly females, ranging from semi-literate to illiterate adults but who are nevertheless numerically literate. We found that obscured socio-cultural circumstances of the users instigated their choice of DTMF over the speech-enabled IVR modality and this in turn led to elevated levels of both acceptance and rapid learnability towards the users´ technology of choice.
Keywords :
computer aided instruction; health care; information systems; interactive systems; medical computing; speech processing; telephony; HIV/AIDS; OpenPhone system; Southern Africa; care-giving health information; information access; interactive voice response; low literacy users; speech-enabled IVR systems; telephone; touch-enabled IVR systems; Acquired immune deficiency syndrome; Africa; Context; Human immunodeficiency virus; Prototypes; Speech recognition; Usability; ASR; BBCCCoE; Botswana; DTMF; HIV/AIDS; Illiterate users; Information access; Interactive Voice Response (IVR) system; Learnability; Stigma; Usability; Wizard-of-oz (WOZ);
Conference_Titel :
User Science and Engineering (i-USEr), 2010 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Shah Alam
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-9048-6
DOI :
10.1109/IUSER.2010.5716760