You, Me, and IoT: How Internet-connected Consumer Devices Affect Interpersonal Relationships

Author:

Apthorpe Noah1ORCID,Emami-Naeini Pardis2ORCID,Mathur Arunesh3ORCID,Chetty Marshini4ORCID,Feamster Nick4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Colgate University, Hamilton, NY

2. University of Washington, Seattle, WA

3. Princeton University, Princeton, NJ

4. University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Abstract

Internet-connected consumer devices have rapidly increased in popularity; however, relatively little is known about how these technologies are affecting interpersonal relationships in multi-occupant households. In this study, we conduct 13 semi-structured interviews and survey 508 individuals from a variety of backgrounds to discover and categorize how consumer IoT devices are affecting interpersonal relationships in the United States. We highlight several themes, providing exploratory data about the pervasiveness of interpersonal costs and benefits of consumer IoT devices. These results inform follow-up studies and design priorities for future IoT technologies to amplify positive and reduce negative interpersonal effects.

Funder

NSF Award

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Software,Information Systems,Hardware and Architecture,Computer Science Applications,Computer Networks and Communications

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4. Albert Bandura. 1994. Self-efficacy. Encyclopedia of Human Behavior (Vol. 4). Academic Press, New York, 71–81.

5. Erin Beneteau, Olivia K. Richards, Mingrui Zhang, Julie A. Kientz, Jason Yip, and Alexis Hiniker. 2019. Communication breakdowns between families and Alexa. In Proceedings of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. 1–13.

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