Just ask Siri? A pilot study comparing smartphone digital assistants and laptop Google searches for smoking cessation advice.

To compare voice-activated internet searches by smartphone (two digital assistants) with laptop ones for information and advice related to smoking cessation.Responses to 80 questions on a range of topics related to smoking cessation (including the FAQ from a NHS website), compared for quality.Smartp...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Matt Boyd, Nick Wilson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5874038?pdf=render
id doaj-1f64baa732f94d71b975d356d819e534
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1f64baa732f94d71b975d356d819e5342020-11-25T00:02:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01133e019481110.1371/journal.pone.0194811Just ask Siri? A pilot study comparing smartphone digital assistants and laptop Google searches for smoking cessation advice.Matt BoydNick WilsonTo compare voice-activated internet searches by smartphone (two digital assistants) with laptop ones for information and advice related to smoking cessation.Responses to 80 questions on a range of topics related to smoking cessation (including the FAQ from a NHS website), compared for quality.Smartphone and internet searches as performed in New Zealand.Ranked responses to the questions.Google laptop internet searches came first (or first equal) for best quality smoking cessation advice for 83% (66/80) of the responses. Voiced questions to Google Assistant ("OK Google") came first/first equal 76% of the time vs Siri (Apple) at 28%. Google and Google Assistant were statistically significantly better than Siri searches (odds ratio 12.4 and 8.5 respectively, p<0.0001 in each comparison). When asked FAQs from the National Health Service website, or to find information the Centers for Disease Control has made videos on, the best search results used expert sources 59% (31/52) of the time, "some expertise" (eg, Wikipedia) 18% of the time, but also magazines and other low quality sources 19% of the time. Using all three methods failed to find relevant information 8% (6/80) of the time, with Siri having the most failed responses (53% of the time).Google internet searches and Google Assistant were found to be significantly superior to the Siri digital assistant for smoking cessation information. While expert content was returned over half the time, there is still substantial room for improvement in how these software systems deliver smoking cessation advice.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5874038?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matt Boyd
Nick Wilson
spellingShingle Matt Boyd
Nick Wilson
Just ask Siri? A pilot study comparing smartphone digital assistants and laptop Google searches for smoking cessation advice.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Matt Boyd
Nick Wilson
author_sort Matt Boyd
title Just ask Siri? A pilot study comparing smartphone digital assistants and laptop Google searches for smoking cessation advice.
title_short Just ask Siri? A pilot study comparing smartphone digital assistants and laptop Google searches for smoking cessation advice.
title_full Just ask Siri? A pilot study comparing smartphone digital assistants and laptop Google searches for smoking cessation advice.
title_fullStr Just ask Siri? A pilot study comparing smartphone digital assistants and laptop Google searches for smoking cessation advice.
title_full_unstemmed Just ask Siri? A pilot study comparing smartphone digital assistants and laptop Google searches for smoking cessation advice.
title_sort just ask siri? a pilot study comparing smartphone digital assistants and laptop google searches for smoking cessation advice.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description To compare voice-activated internet searches by smartphone (two digital assistants) with laptop ones for information and advice related to smoking cessation.Responses to 80 questions on a range of topics related to smoking cessation (including the FAQ from a NHS website), compared for quality.Smartphone and internet searches as performed in New Zealand.Ranked responses to the questions.Google laptop internet searches came first (or first equal) for best quality smoking cessation advice for 83% (66/80) of the responses. Voiced questions to Google Assistant ("OK Google") came first/first equal 76% of the time vs Siri (Apple) at 28%. Google and Google Assistant were statistically significantly better than Siri searches (odds ratio 12.4 and 8.5 respectively, p<0.0001 in each comparison). When asked FAQs from the National Health Service website, or to find information the Centers for Disease Control has made videos on, the best search results used expert sources 59% (31/52) of the time, "some expertise" (eg, Wikipedia) 18% of the time, but also magazines and other low quality sources 19% of the time. Using all three methods failed to find relevant information 8% (6/80) of the time, with Siri having the most failed responses (53% of the time).Google internet searches and Google Assistant were found to be significantly superior to the Siri digital assistant for smoking cessation information. While expert content was returned over half the time, there is still substantial room for improvement in how these software systems deliver smoking cessation advice.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5874038?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT mattboyd justasksiriapilotstudycomparingsmartphonedigitalassistantsandlaptopgooglesearchesforsmokingcessationadvice
AT nickwilson justasksiriapilotstudycomparingsmartphonedigitalassistantsandlaptopgooglesearchesforsmokingcessationadvice
_version_ 1725439186684608512