Abstract

Technologies, such as smart sensors, actuators, and other kinds of devices, are often installed in our environments (e.g., our Homes) and available to integrate our daily lives. Despite their installation being motivated by the pursuit of automation and increased efficiency, making these environments usable, acceptable and enjoyable in a sustainable, energy efficient way is not only a matter of automation. Tackling these goals is a complex task demanding the combination of different perspectives including building and urban Architecture, Ubiquitous Computing and Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) to provide occupants with the means to shape these environments to their needs. Interaction is of paramount relevance in the creation of adequate relations of users with their environments, but it cannot be seen independently from the ubiquitous sensing and computing or the environment’s architecture. In this regard, there are several challenges to HCI, particularly in how to integrate this multidisciplinary effort. Although there are several solutions to address some of these challenges, the complexity and dynamic nature of the smart environments and the diversity of technologies involved still present many challenges, particularly for its development. In general, the development is complex, and it is hard to create a dynamic environment providing versatile and adaptive forms of interaction. To participate in the multidisciplinary effort, the development of interaction must be supported by tools capable of facilitating co-design by multidisciplinary teams. In this article, we address the development of interaction for complex smart environments and propose the AM4I architecture and framework, a novel modular approach to design and develop adaptive multiplatform multilingual multi-device multimodal interactive systems. The potential of the framework is demonstrated by proof-of-concept applications in two different smart environment contexts, non-residential buildings and smart homes.

Highlights

  • We live in an age where our environment can be populated with a wide diversity of technologies

  • Cue-me and have been considered in our work when we extended our agent-based architecture for Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) [15,16,17]

  • The diagram illustrates the modules of the system, modalities, fusion, Interaction Manager (IM), application, and other support services as well as messages exchanged between the modalities and the fusion and IM, implemented with Multimodal Interaction (MMI) life cycle events

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Summary

Introduction

We live in an age where our environment can be populated with a wide diversity of technologies. From small sensors/actuators to large home appliances, all connected to networks, they, can be harnessed to improve some aspects of our daily lives [1,2,3] These connected technologies can be used to create pervasive smart environments, and, while if on the one hand the system can be autonomous, in many occasions, making decisions to better help the users, it should have a pervasive and simple interface providing the user with the necessary means to take control, at any time. The conclusion presents the main achievements and points some routes for future work

Background & Related Work
Multimodal Interaction
Multidevice
Sensors and Actuators
Main Challenges
The AM4I Architecture
Main Requirements
Overview of Architecture
The AM4I Framework
Modalities
Generic Speech Modality
Modality for Occupants Detection and Identification
Graphical Output Modality
Gestures Modality
Interaction Managers
Fusion
User and Context Services
First Results
Non-Residential Smart Building
Proof-of-Concept 1—User-Adapted Content
Proof-of-Concept 2—Meeting
Smart Home Context
Conclusions
Future Work
Full Text
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