von Reischach, Felix; Michahelles, Florian; Guinard, Dominique; Adelmann, Robert; Fleisch, Elgar; Schmidt, Albrecht:
An Evaluation of Product Identification Techniques for Mobile Phones
In: Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 2009 : Proceedings, Part I / Gross, Tom; Gulliksen, Jan; Kotzé, Paula; Oestreicher, Lars; Palanque, Philippe; Prates, Raquel Oliveira; Winckler, Marco (Eds.). - 12th IFIP TC 13 International Conference, Uppsala, Sweden, August 24-28, 2009 - Berlin: Springer, 2009 - (Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 5726), pp. 804 - 816
2009book article/chapter in ProceedingsOpen Access
Computer ScienceEconomicsFaculty of Business Administration and Economics » Computer Science » Pervasive Computing
Title in English:
An Evaluation of Product Identification Techniques for Mobile Phones
Author:
von Reischach, Felix;Michahelles, Florian;Guinard, Dominique;Adelmann, Robert;Fleisch, Elgar;Schmidt, AlbrechtUDE
LSF ID
49166
ORCID
0000-0003-3890-1990ORCID iD
Other
connected with university
Open Access?:
Open Access
Scopus ID
Language of text:
English

Abstract in English:

Among others, consumer products can be purchased in the Internet and in traditional stores. Each of the two has dedicated advantages. An online survey conducted within the frames of this work investigates these advantages. It motivates the transition of the advantages of online shopping, such as access to recommendations of other consumers, to the sales floor. Recent trends in mobile phone technology, for example the emergence of the mobile Internet, enable exactly this transition, potentially enriching the shopping experience in the real world. A key challenge though is a fast and convenient identification of products. This work compares five product identification modalities for mobile phones in a comparative study. The dependent variables evaluated are ‘task completion time’ and ‘perceived ease of use’. Our study is the first that quantifies the advantage of automatic identification. The results indicate that automatically identifying a product scanning a tag can be up to eight times faster than entering a product name in a text field. Surprisingly, barcode recognition using a camera phone can be conducted almost as fast and convenient as scanning an RFID tag. Our work provides a benchmark for developers having to choose appropriate identification technology for their mobile application.