Vittorio Castelli, Lawrence Bergman
IUI 2007
This paper addresses the feasibility of using the telephone as a tool for information access in the technology challenged and illiterate communities of Southern Africa. We did a case study of the OpenPhone system in the context of caregivers for HIV/AIDS infected children in Botswana. The aim was to design an IVR system for delivering care-giving health information in Setswana using a normal telephone. The study compares DTMF and speech-enabled IVR systems. The targeted users are predominantly females, ranging from semi-literate to illiterate adults but who are nevertheless numerically literate. We found that obscured socio-cultural circumstances of the users instigated their choice of DTMF over the speech-enabled IVR modality and this in turn led to elevated levels of both acceptance and rapid learnability towards the users' technology of choice. ©2010 IEEE.
Vittorio Castelli, Lawrence Bergman
IUI 2007
Michael Heck, Masayuki Suzuki, et al.
INTERSPEECH 2017
Fan Zhang, Junwei Cao, et al.
IEEE TETC
Jean McKendree, John M. Carroll
CHI 1986