4,082 research outputs found

    Analysis domain model for shared virtual environments

    Get PDF
    The field of shared virtual environments, which also encompasses online games and social 3D environments, has a system landscape consisting of multiple solutions that share great functional overlap. However, there is little system interoperability between the different solutions. A shared virtual environment has an associated problem domain that is highly complex raising difficult challenges to the development process, starting with the architectural design of the underlying system. This paper has two main contributions. The first contribution is a broad domain analysis of shared virtual environments, which enables developers to have a better understanding of the whole rather than the part(s). The second contribution is a reference domain model for discussing and describing solutions - the Analysis Domain Model

    Playing Smart - Another Look at Artificial Intelligence in Computer Games

    Get PDF

    Continuum: an architecture for user evolvable collaborative virtual environments

    Get PDF
    Continuum is a software platform for collaborative virtual environments. Continuum\u27s architecture supplies a world model and defines how to combine object state, behavior code, and resource data into this single shared structure. The system frees distributed users from the constraints of monolithic centralized virtual world architectures and instead allows individual users to extend and evolve the virtual world by creating and controlling their own individual pieces of the larger world model. The architecture provides support for data distribution, code management, resource management, and rapid deployment through standardized viewers. This work not only provides this architecture, but it includes a proven implementation and the associated development tools to allow for creation of these worlds

    Artificial Societies, Virtual Worlds, and Their Meaningful Integration

    Get PDF
    Artificial societies and virtual worlds are two areas of interest to modern social scientists that are distinctly separate in modern academic study, and are yet undeniably related. Artificial societies are multi-agent systems comprised of autonomous social agents, programmed with their own set of rules and behavior. While virtual worlds are occupied in large part by human controlled agents participating in a collective virtual experience and space. Within both types of virtual environments there can be found a scarcity of resources and intricate cross-entity interaction. This often results in the development and evolution of complex economic and cultural structures. In addition, by examining the modern research and common history shared by each field, it is possible to compile a set of shared attributes. This work attempts to capitalize on these shared features and promote a new type of integrated analysis that holds potential for future development in both fields. The concrete implementation of these ideas takes form as a simple economic model containing meaningful computer and human interaction as well as a framework designed for future extensibility

    On network latency in distributed interactive applications

    Get PDF
    This paper has three objectives. Firstly it describes the historical development of Distributed Interactive Applications. It then defines network latency. Finally it describes a new approach to masking network latency in Distributed Interactive Applications called the strategy model approach. This approach derives from the on-going PhD studies of one of the authors. A software application to gather strategy data from users is described in detail and an example of deriving a user strategy is given
    • …
    corecore