@inproceedings{Pohl2017,
	abstract = {Current mobile devices commonly use vibration feedback to signal incoming notifications. However, vibration feedback exhibits strong attention capture, limiting its use to short periods and prominent notifications. Instead, we investigate the use of compression feedback for notifications, which scales from subtle stimuli to strong ones and can provide sustained stimuli over longer periods. Compression feedback utilizes inflatable straps around a user's limbs, a form factor allowing for easy integration into many common wearables. We explore technical aspects of compression feedback and investigate its psychophysical properties with several lab and in situ studies. Furthermore, we show how compression feedback enables reactive feedback. Here, deflation patterns are used to reveal further information on a user's query. We also compare compression and vibrotactile feedback and find that they have similar performance.},
	title = {Squeezeback: Pneumatic Compression for Notifications},
	author = {Pohl, Henning and Brandes, Peter and Quang, Hung Ngo and Rohs, Michael},
	booktitle = {Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems},
	doi = {10.1145/3025453.3025526},
	year = {2017},
	papertype = {fullpaper}
}