Impact of delayed response on wearable cognitive assistance.

Wearable cognitive assistants (WCA) are anticipated to become a widely-used application class, in conjunction with emerging network infrastructures like 5G that incorporate edge computing capabilities. While prototypical studies of such applications exist today, the relationship between infrastructu...

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Main Authors: Manuel Olguín Muñoz, Roberta Klatzky, Junjue Wang, Padmanabhan Pillai, Mahadev Satyanarayanan, James Gross
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248690
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spelling doaj-c36f31f9185841b8b5a040ae4902fbfa2021-04-07T04:32:31ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01163e024869010.1371/journal.pone.0248690Impact of delayed response on wearable cognitive assistance.Manuel Olguín MuñozRoberta KlatzkyJunjue WangPadmanabhan PillaiMahadev SatyanarayananJames GrossWearable cognitive assistants (WCA) are anticipated to become a widely-used application class, in conjunction with emerging network infrastructures like 5G that incorporate edge computing capabilities. While prototypical studies of such applications exist today, the relationship between infrastructure service provisioning and its implication for WCA usability is largely unexplored despite the relevance that these applications have for future networks. This paper presents an experimental study assessing how WCA users react to varying end-to-end delays induced by the application pipeline or infrastructure. Participants interacted directly with an instrumented task-guidance WCA as delays were introduced into the system in a controllable fashion. System and task state were tracked in real time, and biometric data from wearable sensors on the participants were recorded. Our results show that periods of extended system delay cause users to correspondingly (and substantially) slow down in their guided task execution, an effect that persists for a time after the system returns to a more responsive state. Furthermore, the slow-down in task execution is correlated with a personality trait, neuroticism, associated with intolerance for time delays. We show that our results implicate impaired cognitive planning, as contrasted with resource depletion or emotional arousal, as the reason for slowed user task executions under system delay. The findings have several implications for the design and operation of WCA applications as well as computational and communication infrastructure, and additionally for the development of performance analysis tools for WCA.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248690
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manuel Olguín Muñoz
Roberta Klatzky
Junjue Wang
Padmanabhan Pillai
Mahadev Satyanarayanan
James Gross
spellingShingle Manuel Olguín Muñoz
Roberta Klatzky
Junjue Wang
Padmanabhan Pillai
Mahadev Satyanarayanan
James Gross
Impact of delayed response on wearable cognitive assistance.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Manuel Olguín Muñoz
Roberta Klatzky
Junjue Wang
Padmanabhan Pillai
Mahadev Satyanarayanan
James Gross
author_sort Manuel Olguín Muñoz
title Impact of delayed response on wearable cognitive assistance.
title_short Impact of delayed response on wearable cognitive assistance.
title_full Impact of delayed response on wearable cognitive assistance.
title_fullStr Impact of delayed response on wearable cognitive assistance.
title_full_unstemmed Impact of delayed response on wearable cognitive assistance.
title_sort impact of delayed response on wearable cognitive assistance.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Wearable cognitive assistants (WCA) are anticipated to become a widely-used application class, in conjunction with emerging network infrastructures like 5G that incorporate edge computing capabilities. While prototypical studies of such applications exist today, the relationship between infrastructure service provisioning and its implication for WCA usability is largely unexplored despite the relevance that these applications have for future networks. This paper presents an experimental study assessing how WCA users react to varying end-to-end delays induced by the application pipeline or infrastructure. Participants interacted directly with an instrumented task-guidance WCA as delays were introduced into the system in a controllable fashion. System and task state were tracked in real time, and biometric data from wearable sensors on the participants were recorded. Our results show that periods of extended system delay cause users to correspondingly (and substantially) slow down in their guided task execution, an effect that persists for a time after the system returns to a more responsive state. Furthermore, the slow-down in task execution is correlated with a personality trait, neuroticism, associated with intolerance for time delays. We show that our results implicate impaired cognitive planning, as contrasted with resource depletion or emotional arousal, as the reason for slowed user task executions under system delay. The findings have several implications for the design and operation of WCA applications as well as computational and communication infrastructure, and additionally for the development of performance analysis tools for WCA.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248690
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