A Cross-Cultural Analysis of Animated Representations of Emotions for Wearable Interfaces
For designers of wearable interfaces, this work provides empirical evidence on which visual parameters can be used globally for emotion communication, though it is an incremental step in cross-cultural HCI.
This study investigates the cross-cultural validity of animated emotion representations for wearable interfaces, finding that color and object size are universally understood as emotional carriers, while animation speed shows cultural variation.
Although pervasive sensing technologies are increasingly capable of continuously detecting human emotional states, there is still a critical challenge: how to unobtrusively communicate this sensed data back to the user. Realistic avatars are effective but often unsuitable for the limited screen space and peripheral nature of wearable. Abstract geometric animation offers a promising, rapidly interpretable alternative, but its cross-cultural validity remains under-explored. This study investigates the universality of animated emotion representations. We conducted a comparative study with 105 participants from Poland and Turkey and analyzed how they map emotions to visual parameters, such as color, shape, size, speed, and animation type. The results indicate that color and object size are universally understood as carriers of emotional meaning, making them suitable for global visualization models. However, some cultural variation in dynamic range preferences was revealed by animation speed. These results lay the groundwork for developing generative visualization algorithms that translate continuous sensor data into intuitive, culturally relevant feedback for pervasive environments.