Automated mapping of competitive and collaborative overlapping talk in video meetings
- Eleni Margariti ,
- Sean Rintel ,
- Brendan Murphy ,
- Abigail Sellen
CHI 2022 |
Organized by ACM
CHI ’22 Extended Abstracts
Video meetings are notorious for difficulties with conversational turn-taking, which has impacts on inclusion and outcomes. We present a scalable automatic process to categorize turn-taking patterns in remote meetings based on eyes-off analysis of meeting transcripts. Drawing on a series of remote meetings (10 series, 34 total meetings) recorded in July-August 2021 by employees of a global technology company, we identified and parametrized patterns of cooperative and competitive overlaps of turns. The results show initial success characterizing people’s behaviours as either likely to continue or cede turns based on either the amount of overlap that they produce during other’s turns or the amount of overlap they experience in their own turns. With further development and validation, this method could be used to measure inclusion in remote and hybrid meetings.
Eleni Margariti, Sean Rintel, Brendan Murphy, and Abigail Sellen. 2022. Automated mapping of competitive and collaborative overlapping talk in video meetings.. In CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems Extended Abstracts (CHI ’22 Extended Abstracts), April 29–May 05, 2022, New Orleans, LA, USA. ACM, New York, NY, USA, 8 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/3491101.3519612