Audience response

Audience Response is a type of interaction associated with the use of Audience Response systems to facilitate interaction between a presenter and their audience.

Systems for co-located audiences combine wireless hardware with presentation software. Systems for remote audiences may use telephones or web polls for audiences watching through television or the internet. Various names are used for this technology, including real-time response,[1] the worm,[2] dial testing, and Audience Response meters. In educational settings, such systems are often called "student response systems" or "personal response systems". The hand-held remote control that students use to convey their responses to questions is often called a "clicker".

More recent entrants into the market do not require specialized hardware. There are commercial, open-source, cloud-based tools that allow responses from the audience using a range of personal computing devices such as cell phones, smartphones, and laptops. These types of systems have added new types of functionality as well, such as free text responses that are aggregated into sortable word clouds, as well as the more traditional true/false and multiple choice style questions. This type of system also mitigates some of the concerns articulated below in the "Challenges of Audience Response" section.

  1. ^ Zilberstein, Shirley. "CNN to track debate viewers' responses in real time". edition.cnn.com.
  2. ^ "What is a Worm Poll?". wisegeek.com. 30 November 2023.