Voice User Interface, or VUI, has grown dramatically in popularity recently.
VUI is using speech recognition technology to enable users to interact with devices using only their voices.
Some virtual assistants like 'Siri' (Apple) and 'Alexa' (Amazon/Microsoft) have allowed VUI to reach a significant development stage.
VUI allows for efficient interactions
that are more 'human' than any other form of voice user interface such as a mouse or
keyboard because "speech is the primary means of human
communication".
Different types of user interface
Voice User Interface, or VUI, has
exploded in popularity in recent years. VUI uses speech recognition technology
to enable users to interact with the technology using only their voices.
Virtual assistants like Siri and Alexa have brought VUI into the mainstream,
with corporate giants like Google and Sonos following their lead. Companies
such as Synqq and Nexmo have also leveraged VUI technologies to develop devices
that allow for real-time translation and transcription. However, it's virtual
assistants that have really captured the corporate imagination.
VUI allows for hands-free, efficient
interactions that are more 'human' in nature than any other user interface.
"Speech is the primary means of human communication," writes Clifford
Nass, Stanford researcher and co-author of Wired for Speech, "...all
cultures primarily persuade, inform, and build relationships through
speech." To build working VUI systems, developers need to fully understand
the complexities of human communication. Consumers expect a certain level of
fluency in human idioms as well as a more conversational tone from the bots and
virtual assistants they interact with on a daily basis.
We're not quite in Westworld yet, but
it's clear that robotic assistants are here to stay. With this in mind, it is
important to understand all the potential pitfalls and positive opportunities
that come with this newly popular technology. So let's explore the good, the
bad and the downright ugly side of VUI.
The Good
To create a good VUI, brands need to
understand what their customers want from a virtual assistant and, more
importantly, what aspects of interaction with artificial intelligence (AI) will
bring them to the fullest. go VUI has many advantages that other user
interfaces cannot provide, namely:
Personality and Tone
With voice-based
virtual assistants there is more opportunity for brands to inject a little
personality and humor. Ask Siri to beatbox for you and she'll do just that,
call her by the wrong name and she'll come back "Very funny. I mean, not
funny 'ha-ha' but funny. From Star Trek." From Sir Mix A Lot, like
Amazon's Alexa, Google Home is completely peppered with pop culture references.
A more personal tone helps users forgive those moments when the virtual
assistant gets things done. or unable to answer questions that would not bother
a real human being.
Efficiency and Convenience
The VUI
requires nothing more than a voice command to perform tasks or answer
questions. No longer will amateur chefs be forced to scramble to set timers
lest they smudge the screens of their ultra-expensive smartphones. Now they can
just ask Alexa and she will set it up for them. Users can quickly check the
weather forecast when leaving the house, add an item to their grocery list
without searching for a pen, or skip a song on Spotify without lifting a
finger. VUIs are more likely to exist in devices that are online and connected
throughout the day, devices that may one day become integral to our daily
lives.
Bad
As discussed, the implementation of VUI
is not without its obstacles. Problems that arise during the conceptualization
and design process are often the result of an inadequate understanding of human
psychology. In order to adopt VUI-based devices and prevent problems related to
user frustration, we should consider the following:
Discovery and Retention
While Amazon
has made it very easy for third-party developers to come up with their own
skills for the Amazon Echo, only 31% of these 7,000+ skills have more than one
review, which is underutilized. is an indication of This problem is not unique
to Amazon. To increase adoption rates, developers need to let users know what
they can and can't do from the start, while still working to 'humanize' VUI
systems. But these virtual assistants are built.
Understanding the Limits
When a machine
and a human are engaged in a conversation, we need to adapt the way we
communicate – humans are not used to following rigid, inflexible linguistic
laws, especially When it comes to speech. If users understand from the start
the ways in which their device is limited, they are less likely to be
frustrated when their assistant fails to complete a task or respond to a task
that is too complex. Seems like an easy question.
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