Adesemowo, A. KayodeTucker, William David2014-06-032014-06-032004Adesemowo, A. K., & Tucker, W. D. (2004). Affective gesture feedback Instant Messaging on handhelds. Fifth International Conference on 3G Mobile Communication Technologies, (pp. 499–503), Savoy Place, London, United Kingdom0-86341-388-90537-9989http://hdl.handle.net/10566/1095Mobile devices and mobile networks are becoming more data-centric (evident in Japanese I-mode) even as mobile network voice Average Revenue Per User are declining, new stream of data services are required which must take cognisance of handhelds features albeit their small screen estate and input/output limitations. A text only Instant Messaging (IM) built on the Internet Engineering Task Force open standard Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) and SIP for Instant Messaging and Presence Leveraging Extensions (SIMPLE) has been developed in line with our novel introduction of a user-defined text Hotkey feature. Given that text communication possesses expressive discourse with some presence level, we seek to show that one-click text-gesture fast-tracking enhances text communication further. For this study, we are taking a hybrid quantitative and qualitative approach. Initial results have shown that an Affective Gesture approach is more likely to improve IM chat spontaneity/response rate. Enhanced input mechanisms for handheld IM system are expected to increase co-presence between handheld users and their desktop-based counterparts while in a synchronous discussion.enCopyright Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. This file may be freely used for educational purposes, as long as it is not altered in any way. Acknowledgement of the authors and the source is required.Affective gestureFast-trackingInstant messagingWireless handheldCo-presenceAffective gesture feedback Instant Messaging on handheldsArticle