User Control over User Adaptation: A Case Study

The A theory of user expectation of system interaction is introduced in the context of User Adapted Interfaces. The usability of an intelligent email client that learns to filter spam emails is tested under three variants of adaptation: no user modeling, user modeling with fixed (optimal) spam cut-offs, and user modeling with user adjustable spam cut-offs. The results supported our hypothesis that user control over adaptation is preferred because the user can maintain the system's interaction state within a region of user expectation. This remains true even when performance of the system (accuracy of spam filtering) degrades because of errors in user control (adjustment of spam cut-offs).