Multi-Modal End-User Programming of Web-Based Virtual Assistant Skills
August 24, 2020 Β· Declared Dead Β· π arXiv.org
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Authors
Michael H. Fischer, Giovanni Campagna, Euirim Choi, Monica S. Lam
arXiv ID
2008.13510
Category
cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction
Citations
4
Venue
arXiv.org
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
While Alexa can perform over 100,000 skills on paper, its capability covers only a fraction of what is possible on the web. To reach the full potential of an assistant, it is desirable that individuals can create skills to automate their personal web browsing routines. Many seemingly simple routines, however, such as monitoring COVID-19 stats for their hometown, detecting changes in their child's grades online, or sending personally-addressed messages to a group, cannot be automated without conventional programming concepts such as conditional and iterative evaluation. This paper presents VASH (Voice Assistant Scripting Helper), a new system that empowers users to create useful web-based virtual assistant skills without learning a formal programming language. With VASH, the user demonstrates their task of interest in the browser and issues a few voice commands, such as naming the skills and adding conditions on the action. VASH turns these multi-modal specifications into skills that can be invoked invoice on a virtual assistant. These skills are represented in a formal programming language we designed called WebTalk, which supports parameterization, function invocation, conditionals, and iterative execution. VASH is a fully working prototype that works on the Chrome browser on real-world websites. Our user study shows that users have many web routines they wish to automate, 81% of which can be expressed using VASH. We found that VASH Is easy to learn, and that a majority of the users in our study want to use our system.
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