Analyzing Emergent Users’ Text Messages Data and Exploring Its Benefits

While users in the developed world can choose to adopt the technology that suits their needs, the <italic>emergent</italic> users cannot afford this luxury, and hence, they adapt themselves to the technology that is readily available. When technology is designed, such as the mobile-phone...

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Main Authors: Anas Bilal, Aimal Rextin, Ahmad Kakakhel, Mehwish Nasim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2019-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8589060/
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spelling doaj-cd9c3a1e27d843cd85c3b94343b6eb722021-03-29T22:08:46ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362019-01-0172870287910.1109/ACCESS.2018.28853328589060Analyzing Emergent Users&#x2019; Text Messages Data and Exploring Its BenefitsAnas Bilal0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5037-804XAimal Rextin1Ahmad Kakakhel2Mehwish Nasim3Department of Computer Science, COMSATS University Islamabad, Islamabad, PakistanDepartment of Computer Science, COMSATS University Islamabad, Islamabad, PakistanDepartment of Computer Science, COMSATS University Islamabad, Islamabad, PakistanSchool of Mathematical Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, AustraliaWhile users in the developed world can choose to adopt the technology that suits their needs, the <italic>emergent</italic> users cannot afford this luxury, and hence, they adapt themselves to the technology that is readily available. When technology is designed, such as the mobile-phone technology, it is an implicit assumption that it would be adopted by the emergent users in due course. However, such user groups have different needs, and they follow different usage patterns as compared to users from the developed world. In this paper, we target an emergent user base, i.e., users from a university in Pakistan, and analyze their texting behavior on mobile phones. We see interesting results, such as the long-term linguistic adaptation of users in the absence of reasonable Urdu keyboards, the overt preference for communicating in Roman Urdu, and the social forces related to textual interaction. We also present two case studies on how a single dataset can effectively help understand emergent users, improve usability of some tasks, and also help users perform previously difficult tasks with ease.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8589060/Emergent usersRoman Urdutext message analysisword completion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anas Bilal
Aimal Rextin
Ahmad Kakakhel
Mehwish Nasim
spellingShingle Anas Bilal
Aimal Rextin
Ahmad Kakakhel
Mehwish Nasim
Analyzing Emergent Users&#x2019; Text Messages Data and Exploring Its Benefits
IEEE Access
Emergent users
Roman Urdu
text message analysis
word completion
author_facet Anas Bilal
Aimal Rextin
Ahmad Kakakhel
Mehwish Nasim
author_sort Anas Bilal
title Analyzing Emergent Users&#x2019; Text Messages Data and Exploring Its Benefits
title_short Analyzing Emergent Users&#x2019; Text Messages Data and Exploring Its Benefits
title_full Analyzing Emergent Users&#x2019; Text Messages Data and Exploring Its Benefits
title_fullStr Analyzing Emergent Users&#x2019; Text Messages Data and Exploring Its Benefits
title_full_unstemmed Analyzing Emergent Users&#x2019; Text Messages Data and Exploring Its Benefits
title_sort analyzing emergent users&#x2019; text messages data and exploring its benefits
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2019-01-01
description While users in the developed world can choose to adopt the technology that suits their needs, the <italic>emergent</italic> users cannot afford this luxury, and hence, they adapt themselves to the technology that is readily available. When technology is designed, such as the mobile-phone technology, it is an implicit assumption that it would be adopted by the emergent users in due course. However, such user groups have different needs, and they follow different usage patterns as compared to users from the developed world. In this paper, we target an emergent user base, i.e., users from a university in Pakistan, and analyze their texting behavior on mobile phones. We see interesting results, such as the long-term linguistic adaptation of users in the absence of reasonable Urdu keyboards, the overt preference for communicating in Roman Urdu, and the social forces related to textual interaction. We also present two case studies on how a single dataset can effectively help understand emergent users, improve usability of some tasks, and also help users perform previously difficult tasks with ease.
topic Emergent users
Roman Urdu
text message analysis
word completion
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8589060/
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AT mehwishnasim analyzingemergentusersx2019textmessagesdataandexploringitsbenefits
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