Interfaces: Modeling, Analysis, Numerics / Eberhard Bänsch ... [et al.]
| Interfaces: Modeling, Analysis, Numerics / Eberhard Bänsch ... [et al.] |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cham, : Birkhäuser, : Springer, 2023 |
| Descrizione fisica | xii, 178 p. : ill. ; 24 cm |
| Soggetto non controllato |
Differential geometry
Elastic Flow Finite element methods Fluid Dynamics Free Boundary Problems Geometric Evolution Equations Interfaces Level Set Method Mathematical modelling Mean curvature flow Parametric Approaches Partial differential equations Phase Field Methods Two-phase flow |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Record Nr. | UNICAMPANIA-VAN0279349 |
| Cham, : Birkhäuser, : Springer, 2023 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Vanvitelli | ||
| ||
Interfaces: Modeling, Analysis, Numerics / Eberhard Bänsch ... [et al.]
| Interfaces: Modeling, Analysis, Numerics / Eberhard Bänsch ... [et al.] |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cham, : Birkhäuser, : Springer, 2023 |
| Descrizione fisica | xii, 178 p. : ill. ; 24 cm |
| Soggetto topico |
53-XX - Differential geometry [MSC 2020]
65-XX - Numerical analysis [MSC 2020] 74-XX - Mechanics of deformable solids [MSC 2020] 92-XX - Biology and other natural sciences [MSC 2020] |
| Soggetto non controllato |
Differential geometry
Elastic Flow Finite element methods Fluid Dynamics Free Boundary Problems Geometric Evolution Equations Interfaces Level set methods Mathematical modelling Mean curvature flow Parametric Approaches Partial Differential Equations Phase Field Methods Two-phase flow |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Record Nr. | UNICAMPANIA-VAN00279349 |
| Cham, : Birkhäuser, : Springer, 2023 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Vanvitelli | ||
| ||
Nonlinear Diffusion Equations and Their Equilibrium States 3 : Proceedings from a Conference held August 20–29, 1989 in Gregynog, Wales / N. G. Lloyd, W.-M. Ni, L. A. Peletier editors
| Nonlinear Diffusion Equations and Their Equilibrium States 3 : Proceedings from a Conference held August 20–29, 1989 in Gregynog, Wales / N. G. Lloyd, W.-M. Ni, L. A. Peletier editors |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Boston, : Birkhäuser ; New York, : Springer, 1992 |
| Descrizione fisica | x, 572 p. ; 24 cm |
| Soggetto topico |
00B25 - Proceedings of conferences of miscellaneous specific interest [MSC 2020]
35-XX - Partial differential equations [MSC 2020] |
| Soggetto non controllato |
Area
Behavior Blowing Up Boundary Element Methods Design Differential equations Equations Finite Interfaces Ordinary Differential Equations Partial Differential Equations Similarity Stability eXist |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Record Nr. | UNICAMPANIA-VAN00289242 |
| Boston, : Birkhäuser ; New York, : Springer, 1992 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Vanvitelli | ||
| ||
Phononic and Electronic Excitations in Complex Oxides Studied with Advanced Infrared and Raman Spectroscopy Techniques : Doctoral Thesis accepted by University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland / Fryderyk Lyzwa
| Phononic and Electronic Excitations in Complex Oxides Studied with Advanced Infrared and Raman Spectroscopy Techniques : Doctoral Thesis accepted by University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland / Fryderyk Lyzwa |
| Autore | Lyzwa, Fryderyk |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cham, : Springer, 2022 |
| Descrizione fisica | xxiii, 147 p. : ill. ; 24 cm |
| Soggetto topico |
74K35 - Thin films [MSC 2020]
78-XX - Optics, electromagnetic theory [MSC 2020] 82-XX - Statistical mechanics, structure of matter [MSC 2020] |
| Soggetto non controllato |
Complex Oxides
Confocal Raman Spectroscopy Electronic and Phononic Properties Ellipsometry Infrared Spectroscopy Interfaces Oxide heterostructures Polarization Superconductivity Thin Films |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Record Nr. | UNICAMPANIA-VAN00283708 |
Lyzwa, Fryderyk
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||
| Cham, : Springer, 2022 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Vanvitelli | ||
| ||
Variational and Free Boundary Problems / Avner Friedman, Joel Spruck Editors
| Variational and Free Boundary Problems / Avner Friedman, Joel Spruck Editors |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | New York [etc.], : Springer-Verlag, 1993 |
| Descrizione fisica | xvi, 204 p. : ill. ; 24 cm |
| Soggetto topico |
35J20 - Variational methods for second-order elliptic equations [MSC 2020]
35K55 - Nonlinear parabolic equations [MSC 2020] 35K85 - Unilateral problems for linear parabolic equations and variational inequalities with linear parabolic operators [MSC 2020] 35Q35 - PDEs in connection with fluid mechanics [MSC 2020] 35R05 - PDEs with discontinuous coefficients and/or data [MSC 2020] 35R35 - Free boundary problems for PDEs [MSC 2020] 49J10 - Existence theories for free problems in two or more independent variables [MSC 2020] 49J20 - Existence theories for optimal control problems involving partial differential equations [MSC 2020] 49J40 - Variational inequalities [MSC 2020] 65N55 - Multigrid methods; domain decomposition for boundary value problems involving PDEs [MSC 2020] 93Exx - Stochastic systems and control [MSC 2020] |
| Soggetto non controllato |
Blowing Up
Computer vision Computers Control Equations Forms Free Boundary Problems Interfaces Mathematics Operators Stability Variational problems eXist |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Record Nr. | UNICAMPANIA-VAN00292052 |
| New York [etc.], : Springer-Verlag, 1993 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Vanvitelli | ||
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Voice Assistants in Private Homes : Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse
| Voice Assistants in Private Homes : Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse |
| Autore | Habscheid Stephan |
| Edizione | [1st ed.] |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Bielefeld : , : transcript Verlag, , 2025 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (0 pages) |
| Altri autori (Persone) |
HectorTim
HoffmannDagmar WaldeckerDavid ArndtMaria |
| Collana | Media in Action |
| Soggetto topico | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies |
| Soggetto non controllato |
Data Practices
Digital Media Digitalization Domestication Human-Computer-Interaction Interfaces Language Linguistics Media Aesthetics Media Studies Media Privacy Sociology of Media Surveillance |
| ISBN |
9783839472002
3839472008 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Cover -- Contents -- Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Introduction to the Volume -- 1. The Emergence of Voice Assistants -- 2. Controversial Discourses, Household Publics, and Everyday Practices -- 3. Media Appropriation as a Linguistically Mediated Practice -- 4. Smart Speaker Use and the Social Consequences for Everyday Reality -- 5. On the Contributions in this Volume -- Acknowledgements -- References -- I Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Conceptual Considerations -- The DataEconomy@Home -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Private Spheres: Genealogical Remarks on the Private Home -- 3. Information Control: Privacy in the 20th Century -- 4. Digital Self‐Constitution and Machine Learning@Home -- 5. Conclusion: How Surveillance Capitalism Taps into Just Another Realm of Experience -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Voice Assistants, Capitalism, and the Surveillance of Social Reproduction -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Capitalist Accumulation and Social Reproduction -- 3. Surveillance of Production, Circulation, and Social Reproduction -- 4. Personal Digital Assistants in Capitalist Accumulation and Social Reproduction -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Machines as Partners -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Machines as Partners: Computers as Social Actors -- 3. Talking with Machines - the "CAT Technology Equivalence Model" -- 4. Communication with Machines in Contexts of Dependency -- 4.1. The Study: VAs in Households with Individuals with Special Needs -- 4.2. Types and Frequency of Interactions -- 4.3. Verbal Communication -- 4.4. Accommodation to 'Technical Alexa' or 'Anthropomorphic Alexa' -- 5. Conclusion and Outlook -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Human‐Machine Interaction as a Complex Socio‑Linguistic Practice -- 1. Introduction: The AAS‐Model of HMI as a Complex Socio‑Linguistic Practice.
2. The CASAMASA Approach as One of the Earliest Reference Points for Interpreting Linguistic User Behavior -- 2.1 The Academic Discourse on "Simplified Registers" as a Counterpoint to CASAMASA? -- 2.2 Historical foundations of the academic discourse on "Computer‑Talk" (Zoeppritz 1985) -- Example 1: Krause and Hitzenberger (1992, 159-60) -- 2.2.1 User types according to Fischer (2006) -- 2.2.2 The heterogeneity of HMI (Lotze 2016) -- Levels of asymmetry (Lotze 2016, 346): -- Levels of asymmetry of HMI and their effects -- 3. How Do Users Linguistically Interact With AI in Our Empirical Studies? Alignment, Acceptance and Simplification (AAS) -- 3.1 "Alignment" as a Preconscious Phenomenon -- Example 2: Lotze (2019, 314) -- Example 3: Greilich (in preparation) -- 3.2 "Acceptance" as a Transitional Phenomenon -- Example 4: Max corpus 501-526 -- 3.3 Simplification as an Affordance‐Bound and Affordance‐Unbound User Style -- Example 5: Imperative as affordance‐bound simplification (Amazon Alexa, Greilich, in preparation) -- Example 6: Isolated keywords as affordance‐unbound simplification (Amazon Alexa, Greilich, in preparation) -- Example 7: Collaborative travel planning (1-3) and essay task with ChatGPT (Lotze and Aydin, in preparation) -- 4. A Model for HMI as a Complex Socio‐Linguistic Practice -- Dimension 1: Technological affordances and anthropomorphic design -- Dimension 2: Cognitive awareness levels of the user -- Dimension 3: User language as a continuum of AAS (Alignment, Acceptance, Simplification) -- External influencing factors: -- References -- II Linguistic Exchange with Voice Assistants as a Practical Problem -- "Oh, Now I have to Speak" -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Background -- 2.1 Older adults in social interaction (and interacting with technology) -- 2.2 IPAs in social interaction -- 3. Data and Method -- 4. Analysis. 4.1 Instructing the Use and Exploring IPAs for the First Time -- Excerpt 1 (190925VHSB001521okgoogle) -- Excerpt 2A (190925VHSB001633okgoogle) -- Excerpt 2B (190925VHSB001633okgoogle, continuation of Excerpt 2A) -- 4.2 Discovering IPAs and assessing their value for non‐expert users -- Excerpt 3A (190919NOS010910) -- Excerpt 3B (190919NOS010910, continuation of Excerpt 3A) -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Stylizing the Ideal User -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Style, Styling, and Stylization -- 3. Voice Assistants and their Addressees -- 4. Stylizing the Ideal User -- 4.1. Methodological approach -- 4.2. Accent stylization of non‐Western names -- Excerpt 1 - Accent stylization of the name "Ibrahim" -- Excerpt 2 - Remembering how to pronounce names like Siri -- 4.3. Accent stylization of wake words "Echo", "Alexa", and "Hey Siri" -- Excerpt 3: Accent stylization of "Echo" -- Excerpt 4: Accent stylization of "Hey Siri" -- 5. Conclusions -- Transcription Conventions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Linguistic Practices as a Means of Domesticating Voice‐Controlled Assistance Technologies -- 1. Introduction: Smart Technologies between Public Discourse and Private Practice -- 2. Characteristics of Smart Speakers: How to Investigate them from an Empirical Linguistic Perspective -- 3. Theoretical Foundations: Linguistics of Practices, Interaction, and Media -- 4. Analysis -- 4.1 Linguistic Organization I: The 'VUI Dialogue' -- Example 1: How will the weather be today? -- 4.2 Linguistic Organization II: VUIs as Participants in Multi‑Party Interactions -- Example 2: "Super Alexa Mode" -- 4.3 The Linguistic Accomplishment of Social Usage Practices -- 4.3.1 Early stage -- Example 3: "You asked for mom" -- 4.3.2 Later stage -- Example 4: "When is the next bus?" -- 5. From Smart Speakers to Smart Homes: An Outlook -- Acknowledgements. References -- III Privacy and Data Protection as Practical Problems -- Glitch Studies and Smart Speakers -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Literature Review -- Privacy and Smart Speakers -- Glitch Studies -- 3. Methods -- 4. Results -- 5. Discussion and Conclusion -- References -- The Role of Imagined Sociotechnical Affordances in Shaping Experiences of Privacy in Smart Speakers -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Theoretical Framework -- 2.1 Privacy and smart speakers -- 2.2 Smart speakers and the privacy calculus theory -- 2.3 Smart speaker affordances -- 3. Methods -- 3.1 Student focus groups -- 3.2 Family interviews -- 3.3 Methodological limitations -- 3.4 Connection to prior research -- 4. Results -- 4.1 Controllability affordance -- 4.2 Assistance affordance -- 4.3 Conversation affordance -- 4.4 Linkability affordance -- 4.5 Recordability affordance -- 4.6 Locatability affordance -- 5. Discussion: Adoption Considerations -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Mostly Harmless? Everyday Smart Speaker Use and Pragmatic Fatalism -- 1. Introduction -- 2. From Privacy Paradox to Privacy Cynicism -- 3. Research Design -- 4. Four Shades of Fatalism -- 4.1 Resignation -- 4.2 Cynicism -- 4.3 Trust -- 4.4 Pragmatic fatalism -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1 Fatalism -- 5.2 Domestication -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- How to Make GDPR a Threat Again -- References -- IV Technical Infrastructures as a Practical Problem -- Demystification of Technology -- 1. Introduction and Background -- 2. State of the Art -- 2.1. Privacy Concerns About the Use of VAs -- 2.2. Usable Privacy for Greater Data Literacy -- 3. Methodology -- 4. Findings and Implementation -- 4.1. Data Export Wizard -- 4.2. Data Visualization Dashboard -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1. Data Work Promotes Data Awareness and Literacy -- 5.2. Towards Better Support in Requesting Data (According to Article 15 of the GDPR). 5.3. Towards Demystification: Visualization and Sense‐making of Data -- 5.4. Raising Awareness of the Technological Infrastructure in Which the VA is Embedded -- 5.5. Limitations and Reflections -- 6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Innovating Alexa amid the Rise of Large Language Models -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Research Object and State of Research -- 2.1 Studying the Alexa Prize Competitions -- 2.2 Large Language Models as a problem for Alexa -- 3. Theorizing the Vortex between Platforms and their Complementors -- 3.1 Alexa as a Platform in the Alexa Prize -- 3.2 Platform practices as infrastructuration -- 4. Study Design and Material -- 5. Analysis: Perspectives on Building AI for Alexa -- 5.1 Navigating the implementation of LLMs into Alexa -- 5.2 Implementing LLMs into Alexa: Deciding who talks to the user -- 5.2.1 Building a pipeline: Classifying criteria that govern when to swap between models -- 5.2.2 Transitioning between algorithmic approaches through testing -- 5.3 Catching Up with Innovation: The APCs as a Testing Ground for Alexa‐LLMs -- 6 Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- List of Authors. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910978229003321 |
Habscheid Stephan
|
||
| Bielefeld : , : transcript Verlag, , 2025 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Voice Assistants in Private Homes : Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse
| Voice Assistants in Private Homes : Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse |
| Autore | Habscheid Stephan |
| Edizione | [1st ed.] |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Bielefeld : , : transcript Verlag, , 2025 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (0 pages) |
| Altri autori (Persone) |
HectorTim
HoffmannDagmar WaldeckerDavid ArndtMaria |
| Collana | Media in Action |
| Soggetto topico | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies |
| Soggetto non controllato |
Data Practices
Digital Media Digitalization Domestication Human-Computer-Interaction Interfaces Language Linguistics Media Aesthetics Media Studies Media Privacy Sociology of Media Surveillance |
| ISBN |
9783839472002
3839472008 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Cover -- Contents -- Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Introduction to the Volume -- 1. The Emergence of Voice Assistants -- 2. Controversial Discourses, Household Publics, and Everyday Practices -- 3. Media Appropriation as a Linguistically Mediated Practice -- 4. Smart Speaker Use and the Social Consequences for Everyday Reality -- 5. On the Contributions in this Volume -- Acknowledgements -- References -- I Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Conceptual Considerations -- The DataEconomy@Home -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Private Spheres: Genealogical Remarks on the Private Home -- 3. Information Control: Privacy in the 20th Century -- 4. Digital Self‐Constitution and Machine Learning@Home -- 5. Conclusion: How Surveillance Capitalism Taps into Just Another Realm of Experience -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Voice Assistants, Capitalism, and the Surveillance of Social Reproduction -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Capitalist Accumulation and Social Reproduction -- 3. Surveillance of Production, Circulation, and Social Reproduction -- 4. Personal Digital Assistants in Capitalist Accumulation and Social Reproduction -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Machines as Partners -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Machines as Partners: Computers as Social Actors -- 3. Talking with Machines - the "CAT Technology Equivalence Model" -- 4. Communication with Machines in Contexts of Dependency -- 4.1. The Study: VAs in Households with Individuals with Special Needs -- 4.2. Types and Frequency of Interactions -- 4.3. Verbal Communication -- 4.4. Accommodation to 'Technical Alexa' or 'Anthropomorphic Alexa' -- 5. Conclusion and Outlook -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Human‐Machine Interaction as a Complex Socio‑Linguistic Practice -- 1. Introduction: The AAS‐Model of HMI as a Complex Socio‑Linguistic Practice.
2. The CASAMASA Approach as One of the Earliest Reference Points for Interpreting Linguistic User Behavior -- 2.1 The Academic Discourse on "Simplified Registers" as a Counterpoint to CASAMASA? -- 2.2 Historical foundations of the academic discourse on "Computer‑Talk" (Zoeppritz 1985) -- Example 1: Krause and Hitzenberger (1992, 159-60) -- 2.2.1 User types according to Fischer (2006) -- 2.2.2 The heterogeneity of HMI (Lotze 2016) -- Levels of asymmetry (Lotze 2016, 346): -- Levels of asymmetry of HMI and their effects -- 3. How Do Users Linguistically Interact With AI in Our Empirical Studies? Alignment, Acceptance and Simplification (AAS) -- 3.1 "Alignment" as a Preconscious Phenomenon -- Example 2: Lotze (2019, 314) -- Example 3: Greilich (in preparation) -- 3.2 "Acceptance" as a Transitional Phenomenon -- Example 4: Max corpus 501-526 -- 3.3 Simplification as an Affordance‐Bound and Affordance‐Unbound User Style -- Example 5: Imperative as affordance‐bound simplification (Amazon Alexa, Greilich, in preparation) -- Example 6: Isolated keywords as affordance‐unbound simplification (Amazon Alexa, Greilich, in preparation) -- Example 7: Collaborative travel planning (1-3) and essay task with ChatGPT (Lotze and Aydin, in preparation) -- 4. A Model for HMI as a Complex Socio‐Linguistic Practice -- Dimension 1: Technological affordances and anthropomorphic design -- Dimension 2: Cognitive awareness levels of the user -- Dimension 3: User language as a continuum of AAS (Alignment, Acceptance, Simplification) -- External influencing factors: -- References -- II Linguistic Exchange with Voice Assistants as a Practical Problem -- "Oh, Now I have to Speak" -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Background -- 2.1 Older adults in social interaction (and interacting with technology) -- 2.2 IPAs in social interaction -- 3. Data and Method -- 4. Analysis. 4.1 Instructing the Use and Exploring IPAs for the First Time -- Excerpt 1 (190925VHSB001521okgoogle) -- Excerpt 2A (190925VHSB001633okgoogle) -- Excerpt 2B (190925VHSB001633okgoogle, continuation of Excerpt 2A) -- 4.2 Discovering IPAs and assessing their value for non‐expert users -- Excerpt 3A (190919NOS010910) -- Excerpt 3B (190919NOS010910, continuation of Excerpt 3A) -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Stylizing the Ideal User -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Style, Styling, and Stylization -- 3. Voice Assistants and their Addressees -- 4. Stylizing the Ideal User -- 4.1. Methodological approach -- 4.2. Accent stylization of non‐Western names -- Excerpt 1 - Accent stylization of the name "Ibrahim" -- Excerpt 2 - Remembering how to pronounce names like Siri -- 4.3. Accent stylization of wake words "Echo", "Alexa", and "Hey Siri" -- Excerpt 3: Accent stylization of "Echo" -- Excerpt 4: Accent stylization of "Hey Siri" -- 5. Conclusions -- Transcription Conventions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Linguistic Practices as a Means of Domesticating Voice‐Controlled Assistance Technologies -- 1. Introduction: Smart Technologies between Public Discourse and Private Practice -- 2. Characteristics of Smart Speakers: How to Investigate them from an Empirical Linguistic Perspective -- 3. Theoretical Foundations: Linguistics of Practices, Interaction, and Media -- 4. Analysis -- 4.1 Linguistic Organization I: The 'VUI Dialogue' -- Example 1: How will the weather be today? -- 4.2 Linguistic Organization II: VUIs as Participants in Multi‑Party Interactions -- Example 2: "Super Alexa Mode" -- 4.3 The Linguistic Accomplishment of Social Usage Practices -- 4.3.1 Early stage -- Example 3: "You asked for mom" -- 4.3.2 Later stage -- Example 4: "When is the next bus?" -- 5. From Smart Speakers to Smart Homes: An Outlook -- Acknowledgements. References -- III Privacy and Data Protection as Practical Problems -- Glitch Studies and Smart Speakers -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Literature Review -- Privacy and Smart Speakers -- Glitch Studies -- 3. Methods -- 4. Results -- 5. Discussion and Conclusion -- References -- The Role of Imagined Sociotechnical Affordances in Shaping Experiences of Privacy in Smart Speakers -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Theoretical Framework -- 2.1 Privacy and smart speakers -- 2.2 Smart speakers and the privacy calculus theory -- 2.3 Smart speaker affordances -- 3. Methods -- 3.1 Student focus groups -- 3.2 Family interviews -- 3.3 Methodological limitations -- 3.4 Connection to prior research -- 4. Results -- 4.1 Controllability affordance -- 4.2 Assistance affordance -- 4.3 Conversation affordance -- 4.4 Linkability affordance -- 4.5 Recordability affordance -- 4.6 Locatability affordance -- 5. Discussion: Adoption Considerations -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Mostly Harmless? Everyday Smart Speaker Use and Pragmatic Fatalism -- 1. Introduction -- 2. From Privacy Paradox to Privacy Cynicism -- 3. Research Design -- 4. Four Shades of Fatalism -- 4.1 Resignation -- 4.2 Cynicism -- 4.3 Trust -- 4.4 Pragmatic fatalism -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1 Fatalism -- 5.2 Domestication -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- How to Make GDPR a Threat Again -- References -- IV Technical Infrastructures as a Practical Problem -- Demystification of Technology -- 1. Introduction and Background -- 2. State of the Art -- 2.1. Privacy Concerns About the Use of VAs -- 2.2. Usable Privacy for Greater Data Literacy -- 3. Methodology -- 4. Findings and Implementation -- 4.1. Data Export Wizard -- 4.2. Data Visualization Dashboard -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1. Data Work Promotes Data Awareness and Literacy -- 5.2. Towards Better Support in Requesting Data (According to Article 15 of the GDPR). 5.3. Towards Demystification: Visualization and Sense‐making of Data -- 5.4. Raising Awareness of the Technological Infrastructure in Which the VA is Embedded -- 5.5. Limitations and Reflections -- 6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Innovating Alexa amid the Rise of Large Language Models -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Research Object and State of Research -- 2.1 Studying the Alexa Prize Competitions -- 2.2 Large Language Models as a problem for Alexa -- 3. Theorizing the Vortex between Platforms and their Complementors -- 3.1 Alexa as a Platform in the Alexa Prize -- 3.2 Platform practices as infrastructuration -- 4. Study Design and Material -- 5. Analysis: Perspectives on Building AI for Alexa -- 5.1 Navigating the implementation of LLMs into Alexa -- 5.2 Implementing LLMs into Alexa: Deciding who talks to the user -- 5.2.1 Building a pipeline: Classifying criteria that govern when to swap between models -- 5.2.2 Transitioning between algorithmic approaches through testing -- 5.3 Catching Up with Innovation: The APCs as a Testing Ground for Alexa‐LLMs -- 6 Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- List of Authors. |
| Record Nr. | UNISA-996647828603316 |
Habscheid Stephan
|
||
| Bielefeld : , : transcript Verlag, , 2025 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. di Salerno | ||
| ||