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Publications

Publications by HumanISE

2026

Competitive and Cooperative Player-Oriented GWAPs for Enhancing Crowdsourcing Campaigns - An Evidence-Based Synthesis

Authors
Guimaraes, D; Correia, A; Paulino, D; Paredes, H;

Publication
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION

Abstract
The use of gamified crowdsourcing mechanisms through serious games and games with a purpose (GWAPs) has emerged as an effective motivational strategy for enhancing performance in human intelligence tasks (HITs). In this systematic literature review, we examine the underlying characteristics of competitive and cooperative player-oriented GWAPs and how they can be leveraged to optimize crowdsourcing performance in completing batches of HITs. By exploring gamified crowdsourcing elements in GWAPs, we can evaluate the impact of these two types of player behaviors (i.e., competition and cooperation) on motivation and performance. We reviewed 27 publications and grouped them into five categories: player orientation, game elements and motivation, crowd work optimization, gamified knowledge collection, and comparative studies and best practices. Our research pinpoints the significance of intuitive task instructions, alignment of game elements with player motivations, and the role of competitive and cooperative dynamics in enhancing engagement and performance.

2026

Improving adherence to an online intervention for low mood by a virtual coach or personalized motivational feedback messages: A three-arm pilot randomized controlled trial

Authors
Amarti, K; Ciharová, M; Provoost, S; Schulte, HJ; Kleiboer, A; El Hassouni, A; Gonçalves, GC; Riper, H;

Publication
Internet Interventions

Abstract
Background: Online psychological interventions like behavioural activation (BA) can be provided with or without human support. Unguided online interventions require no human contact and are therefore easier to implement on a large scale than guided interventions. However, effectiveness and adherence rates to these interventions are generally lower. One way to increase adherence to unguided online interventions is to offer automated motivational support. Objective: This pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) examined whether adherence to unguided online BA for low mood could be improved by adding automated support in the form of smartphone-delivered personalized motivational messages or a motivational virtual coach. Methods: A three-arm pilot RCT (n = 106) was conducted that compared an online intervention delivered with automated motivational support by a virtual coach (n = 35), or by automated personalized messages on their smartphone (n = 35), to the same intervention without support (control condition; n = 36). The primary outcome was level of adherence, operationalized as (1) the number of webpages of the intervention visited, and (2) the number of mood ratings completed on the smartphone application, both retrieved from participants' logfiles. Secondary outcomes were satisfaction with the intervention (CSQ-I), usability (SUS) depression scores (HADS), and motivation for treatment (SMFL), measured through online questionnaires administered at baseline or after 4 weeks. Results: Adherence was moderate overall, with participants visiting on average 23 pages of 55 webpages and completing on average 50 of 84 requested mood ratings. No evidence for differences in adherence rates were observed between the intervention conditions and the control condition. Satisfaction with the intervention was moderate to high. Usability scores were below the desirable threshold of 68. Depression symptoms did not change significantly across all participants (p = .053). No significant changes in motivation were found over time or between groups. Conclusions: Adding automated support to unguided online BA for depression did not improve overall adherence. The limited effectiveness may reflect a misalignment between the motivational strategies and the needs of the target population, who reported mild symptoms and high intrinsic motivation. The findings highlight the need to further improve both the quality of automated support and the usability of online platforms. Future research should explore additional adherence-related factors and investigate how personalization can better address different symptom severities in unguided mental health interventions. Trial registration: International Clinical Trials Registry Platform: trialsearch.who.int/Trial2.aspx?TrialID=NL8110. © 2025 The Authors

2026

Designing for (Digital) Nomad-AI Interaction

Authors
Schneider, D; de Almeida, MA; Nascimento, M; Correia, A; de Souza, JM;

Publication
Communications in Computer and Information Science - Computer-Human Interaction Research and Applications

Abstract

2026

Infragenie: Living Software Architecture Diagrams From Docker Compose Files

Authors
Ferreira, R; Correia, FF; Queiroz, PGG;

Publication
SOFTWARE ARCHITECTURE. ECSA 2025 TRACKS AND WORKSHOPS

Abstract
Software architecture is reflected across multiple artifacts, making it difficult to communicate without proper documentation, which often becomes outdated or unreliable. We propose an approach to support Living Documentation by generating architectural diagrams from Docker Compose files. We implement our approach as a prototype tool that we name Infragenie and conduct an empirical study to show the viability of the approach. The study involved sending questionnaires to maintainers of 378 GitHub repositories. We received 36 responses. Infragenie-generated diagrams were rated as better or much better for most of the 12 projects with previous diagrams. Over 70% of the respondents agreed that our approach improved documentation completeness, consistency, and accessibility, and more than 90% recognized its effectiveness in capturing key architectural elements. We conclude that by using Docker Compose files we were able to provide useful architectural diagrams.

2026

"The Implementation of Public Chatbots to Raise Awareness of Computer Crime"

Authors
Pimentel, L; Bernardo, MD; Rocha, T;

Publication
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION

Abstract
Recent technological advancements have increased computer crime, requiring public authorities to implement structured mitigation strategies. While initiatives exist to improve digital literacy on device security, they must also address the complexities of computer crime. Using Design Science Research, this study investigated the applicability of chatbots to raise awareness of computer crime in a public administration setting. A systematic literature review highlighted the issue's relevance and identified knowledge gaps. A scoping review gathered concepts, methodologies, technologies, architectures, and tools for developing and evaluating an effective chatbot. The design and development phase included a detailed proposal for a sophisticated chatbot architecture. During the demonstration and evaluation phases, the utility of the chatbot was tested in the domain of conversational flow efficiency and usability. The study's primary results and contributions are to assess the chatbot's effectiveness in raising awareness of computer crime on public websites. Future work should focus on implementing the chatbot in the actual context of public administration, proposing a network of specialized conversational assistants, and improving public service interoperability to enhance computer crime awareness.

2026

PathSAGE: Identifying Influential Spreaders in Temporal Networks With GraphSAGE

Authors
Sadhu, S; Mallick, D; Namtirtha, A; Malta, MC; Dutta, A;

Publication
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON EMERGING TOPICS IN COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE

Abstract
Identifying influential spreaders in temporal networks is crucial for understanding and controlling the dynamics of spreading. However, existing methods, such as temporal betweenness, closeness, pagerank, degree, and local path-based centrality, face several limitations, including high computational complexity, reliance on shortest paths, convergence issues, inability to capture influence dynamics with insufficient neighboring nodes, and a primary focus on local structural information. This paper presents PathSAGE, a novel method that addresses these problems. It integrates GraphSAGE, a deep learning model, to capture global node information while incorporating temporal local path counts as a key feature. Unlike other global feature-capturing methods, PathSAGE optimises computational complexity. Experimental results on thirteen real-world temporal networks demonstrate that PathSAGE outperforms the state-of-the-art methods in accurately identifying influential spreaders. PathSAGE exhibits a strong correlation with the Temporal Susceptible-Infected-Recovered (TSIR) model and achieves a relative improvement percentage (eta%) ranging from 0.12% to 70.70%. Additionally, PathSAGE attains the lowest average robustness value of 0.17, highlighting its effectiveness in identifying influential spreaders within temporal networks.

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