[Graduate School of Advanced Mathematical Sciences] YAMAZAKI Ikumi and MATSUDA Sayuri receive the Contribution Award at the Special Interest Group on Human Computer Interaction, the Information Processing Society of Japan
Oct. 20, 2023
YAMAZAKI Ikumi, a second-year student in the Master’s Program of the Frontier Media Science Program at the Graduate School of Advanced Mathematical Sciences (NAKAMURA Satoshi Laboratory), and MATSUDA Sayuri, a first-year student in the Master’s Program of the same course, received the Contribution Award at the Special Interest Group on Human Computer Interaction, the Information Processing Society of Japan.
This award is given to a person who has made three different research publications in a year.
Ms. YAMAZAKI won the following three awards:
“Response classification and verification for reduction of non-serious responses in web questionnaire”
“Comparison between smartphones and PCs of the effect of the order of open-ended questions on response time and abandonment in web questionnaire”
“Effects of the order of open-ended questions and text box size on abandonment: a comparison between smartphones and PCs”
A series of studies examines how elements of a web questionnaire affect responses, including the location of open-ended questions and the device used. In the future, this research will be developed to enable questionnaire design to reduce the number of non-serious responses.
Ms. MATSUDA won the following three awards:
“Doremi steering wheel: verification of sound presentation technique according to steering angle using multiple types of curves”
“Basic study on estimation of the weight of objects due to changes in nail color”
“Doremi steering wheel: verification of scale presentation technique according to steering angle in complex curves using AssettoCorsa”
With the research on doremi steering wheel, smooth operation can be mastered by the mechanism of presenting the doremi sound according to the steering angle of the steering wheel. The research on nails estimates weight by using the change in nail color when holding an object. In the future, each of these researches will be developed to realize a system that can be used on a daily basis.
≪Japanese version≫
This award is given to a person who has made three different research publications in a year.
Ms. YAMAZAKI won the following three awards:
“Response classification and verification for reduction of non-serious responses in web questionnaire”
“Comparison between smartphones and PCs of the effect of the order of open-ended questions on response time and abandonment in web questionnaire”
“Effects of the order of open-ended questions and text box size on abandonment: a comparison between smartphones and PCs”
A series of studies examines how elements of a web questionnaire affect responses, including the location of open-ended questions and the device used. In the future, this research will be developed to enable questionnaire design to reduce the number of non-serious responses.
Ms. MATSUDA won the following three awards:
“Doremi steering wheel: verification of sound presentation technique according to steering angle using multiple types of curves”
“Basic study on estimation of the weight of objects due to changes in nail color”
“Doremi steering wheel: verification of scale presentation technique according to steering angle in complex curves using AssettoCorsa”
With the research on doremi steering wheel, smooth operation can be mastered by the mechanism of presenting the doremi sound according to the steering angle of the steering wheel. The research on nails estimates weight by using the change in nail color when holding an object. In the future, each of these researches will be developed to realize a system that can be used on a daily basis.
≪Japanese version≫
Related links