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mi·cro·pro·duc·tiv·i·ty /ˈ mīkrō prōˌdəkˈtivətē / noun

MicroWriter is a unique solution to fragmented focus and multitasking. It breaks down large productivity tasks into smaller microtasks that can be completed individually in short bursts of time with limited context. Collaborative writing is made easy with microtasks that can be shared with known colleagues or crowd workers. Leverage spare mobile moments for increased productivity.

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mi·cro·pro·duc·tiv·i·ty /ˈ mīkrō prōˌdəkˈtivətē / noun

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  1. mi·cro·pro·duc·tiv·i·ty/ˈmīkrōprōˌdəkˈtivətē/ noun Jaime Teevan, Microsoft Research, @jteevan

  2. Unique Solution to Focus & Multitasking • Our focus is fragmented • Constant interruptions, multitasking • Our time is fragmented • Mobile micromoments filled with Angry Birds • Current solutions promote focus mi·cro·pro·duc·tiv·i·ty/ˈmīkrōprōˌdəkˈtivətē/ noun Thetransformation of large productivity tasks into a set of smaller microtasks that can be completed individually in short bursts of time with limited context.

  3. Nebeling, To, Guo, de Freitas, Teevan, Dow & Bigham. WearWrite: Crowd-assisted writing from smartwatches. CHI 2016. Kittur, Smus, Khamkar & Kraut. CrowdForge: Crowdsourcing complex work. UIST 2011. Luther, Hahn, Dow & Kittur. Crowdlines: Supporting Synthesis of Diverse Information Sources through Crowdsourced Outlines. HCOMP 2015. Bernstein, Little, Miller, Hartmann, Ackerman, Karger, Crowell & Panovich. Soylent: A word processor with a crowd inside. UIST 2010. Hahn, Chang, Kim & Kittur. The Knowledge Accelerator: Big picture thinking in small pieces. CHI 2016. Agapie, Teevan & Monroy-Hernández. Crowdsourcing in the field: A case study using local crowds for event reporting. HCOMP 2015. Kim, Cheng & Bernstein. Ensemble: Exploring complementary strengths of leaders and crowds in creative collaboration. CSCW 2014.

  4. ① Collect content ② Organize content ③ Turn content into writing ① ③ ① ② ③

  5. ① Collect Content The MicroWriter breaks writing into microtasks Microtasks can be shared with collaborators Microtasks can be done while mobile Collaborative writing typically requires coordination Collaborators can be known or crowd workers People have spare time when mobile Structure turns big tasks into series of small microtasks Microtasks make it easy to get started

  6. ① Collect Content

  7. ① Collect content ② Organize content ③ Turn content into writing ① ③ ① ① Chilton, Little, Edge, Weld & Landay. Cascade: Crowdsourcing taxonomy creation. CHI 2013. ② ③

  8. ② Organize Content

  9. ② Organize Content collab Microtasks can be shared with collaborators microtask tasks mobile

  10. ② Organize Content The MicroWriter breaks writing into microtasks collab Microtasks can be shared with collaborators Microtasks can be done while mobile microtask Collaborative writing typically requires coordination Collaborators can be known or crowd workers mobile People have spare time when mobile Structure turns big tasks into series of small microtasks Microtasks make it easy to get started

  11. ① Collect content ② Organize content ③ Turn content into writing ① ③ ① ② ① ② ③

  12. ③ Turn Content into Writing The MicroWriter breaks writing into microtasks collab ② Microtasks can be shared with collaborators Microtasks can be done while mobile microtask ① Collaborative writing typically requires coordination Collaborators can be known or crowd workers mobile ③ People have spare time when mobile Structure turns big tasks into series of small microtasks Microtasks make it easy to get started

  13. ③ Turn Content into Writing • Microd • The MicroWriter breaks writing into microtasks • Structure turns big tasks into series of small microtasks • Microtasks make it easy to get started • Collab • Microtasks can be shared with collaborators • Collaborative writing typically requires coordination • Collaborators can be known or crowd workers • Mobile • Microtasks can be done while mobile • People have spare time when mobile microtask collab mobile

  14. ③ Turn Content into Writing

  15. ③ Turn Content into Writing • Micro • Microtasks can be shared with collaborators • Collaborative writing typically requires coordination • Collaborators can be known or crowd workers collab Collaborative writing typically requires coordination. However, microtasks are easy to share with collaborators without the need for coordination. The collaborators can be known colleagues, or paid crowd workers.

  16. ③ Turn Content into Writing • Complete output: Structure makes it possible to turn big tasks into a series of smaller microtasks. For example, the MicroWriter breaks writing into microtasks. These microtasks make the larger task easier to start. Collaborative writing typically requires coordination. However, microtasks are easy to share with collaborators without the need for coordination. The collaborators can be known colleagues, or paid crowd workers. People have spare time when mobile, and these micromoments are ideal for doing microtasks.

  17. ① Collect content ② Organize content ③ Turn content into writing ① MicroWriter ③ ① ② ① ③ ② ③

  18. WearWrite

  19. Opportunity for Microproductivity Gains • Limited productivity gains in information work • US computing capacity increased a hundredfold in the 1970s and 1980s • Labor productivity slowed from 3+% in 1960s to 1% in the 1990s • Solow computer paradox: You can see the computer age everywhere but in the productivity statistics. • Microproductivity algorithmically changes tasks  microtasks • Creates an opportunity to increase productivity via: • Micromoment use • Task arbitrage • Hybrid intelligence

  20. Productivity Gains via Micromoment Use • Idea: Convert non-productive holes into productive time by enabling people to do microtasks in their micromoments • Enabled by: Cloud and mobile technology

  21. Studied Tasks as Macrotaskor Microtasks Macrotask S M A R T Supermarket Visit us on the Internet Than you for shopping K BAR CHOCOLATE ORANGE CADBURY SNACK HOBNOB SKITTLES WALLS CORNETTO BURTONS MARYLAND JAFA CAKE FRUIT SALAD FEDDO What is the total cost of all the times on the receipt? Do not type in the dollar sign. Type in the total. Add the cost of the next item below to the previous total. Do not type in the dollar sign (3 of 10). Add the cost of the next item below to the previous total. Do not type in the dollar sign (1 of 10). Add the cost of the next item below to the previous total. Do not type in the dollar sign (2 of 10). 0.22 0.19 0.22 0.24 0.22 0.25 0.19 0.18 0.26 0.23 Microtask Microtasks Prev Total: 0.22 Prev Total: 0.41 Prev Total: 0.00 New Item: New Item: New Item: + + + Total: Total: Total: = = = Total? Total? Total?

  22. Macrotask Microtasks 77%

  23. Microtasking Leads to Fewer Errors

  24. Microtasking Takes Longer What is… 69 + 79 o 149 o 168 o 147 o 148 o 138 Continue

  25. Microtasking Handles Interruptions

  26. Productivity Gains via Micromoment Use • Idea: Convert non-productive holes into productive time by enabling people to do microtasks in their micromoments • Enabled by: Cloud and mobile technology • What we have learned: • Microtasks let people take advantage of wasted time • People prefer working via microtasks to doing large tasks • Microtasks make it easier to multitask and recover from interruptions

  27. Productivity Gains via Task Arbitrage • Idea: Maximize productive time across multiple people by allocating each microtask to the most efficient person • Enabled by: Sharing economy platforms

  28. Guessing from Examples or Rating ?

  29. Asking the Crowd to Guess v. Rate • Guessing • Requires fewer workers • Fun for workers • Hard to capture complex preferences • Rating • Requires many workers to find a good match • Easy for workers • Data reusable

  30. Handwriting Imitation via Rating • Task: Write “Wizard’s Hex”

  31. Handwriting Imitation via Guessing • Task: Write “Wizard’s Hex” by imitating this handwriting

  32. Extraction and Manipulation Threats

  33. Task Extraction • Target task – Text recognition • Attack task • Complete target task • Return answer from target: 1234 5678 9123 4567 62.1% 32.8% 1234 5678 9123 4567

  34. Task Manipulation • Target task – Text recognition • Attack task • Enter “sun” as the answer for the attack task gun (36%), fun (26%), sun (12%) sun (75%) sun (28%)

  35. Impact of Payment Target $0.05 Target $0.05 Target $0.25

  36. Productivity Gains via Task Arbitrage • Idea: Maximize productive time across multiple people by allocating each microtask to the most efficient person • Enabled by: Sharing economy platforms • What we have learned: • Microtasks reduce the overhead of collaboration • Intelligent task allocation can leverage expertise, availability of others • Care should be taken when sharing tasks with unknown collaborators

  37. Productivity Gains via Hybrid Intelligence • Idea: Augment human intelligence by automating microtasks as usage data is collected • Enabled by: Advances in artificial intelligence • What we have learned: • Breaking a task down makes it possible to automate aspects of the task • When people perform microtasks they provide training data • Humans can provide magical solutions en route to automation

  38. Summary of Microproductivity Gains • Micromoment Use • Microtasks let people take advantage of wasted time • People prefer working via microtasks to doing large tasks • Microtasks make it easier to multitask and recover from interruptions • Task Arbitrage • Microtasks reduce the overhead of collaboration • Intelligent task allocation can leverage expertise, availability of others • Care should be taken when sharing tasks with unknown collaborators • Hybrid Intelligence • Breaking a task down makes it possible to automate aspects of the task • When people perform microtasks they provide training data • Humans can provide magical solutions en route to automation

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