38,490 research outputs found
Is spatial intelligibility critical to the design of largescale virtual environments?
This paper discusses the concept of 'intelligibility', a concept usually attributed to the design of real-world environments and suggests how it might be applied to the construction of virtual environments. In order to illustrate this concept, a 3d, online, collaborative environment, AlphaWorld, is analyzed in a manner analogous to spatial analysis techniques applied to cities in the real world. The outcome of this form of spatial analysis is that AlphaWorld appears to be highly 'intelligible' at the small-scale, 'local neighborhood' level, and yet is completely 'unintelligible' at a global level. This paper concludes with a discussion of the relevance of this finding to virtual environment design plus future research applications
Collaboration in the Semantic Grid: a Basis for e-Learning
The CoAKTinG project aims to advance the state of the art in collaborative mediated spaces for the Semantic Grid. This paper presents an overview of the hypertext and knowledge based tools which have been deployed to augment existing collaborative environments, and the ontology which is used to exchange structure, promote enhanced process tracking, and aid navigation of resources before, after, and while a collaboration occurs. While the primary focus of the project has been supporting e-Science, this paper also explores the similarities and application of CoAKTinG technologies as part of a human-centred design approach to e-Learning
The Partial Evaluation Approach to Information Personalization
Information personalization refers to the automatic adjustment of information
content, structure, and presentation tailored to an individual user. By
reducing information overload and customizing information access,
personalization systems have emerged as an important segment of the Internet
economy. This paper presents a systematic modeling methodology - PIPE
(`Personalization is Partial Evaluation') - for personalization.
Personalization systems are designed and implemented in PIPE by modeling an
information-seeking interaction in a programmatic representation. The
representation supports the description of information-seeking activities as
partial information and their subsequent realization by partial evaluation, a
technique for specializing programs. We describe the modeling methodology at a
conceptual level and outline representational choices. We present two
application case studies that use PIPE for personalizing web sites and describe
how PIPE suggests a novel evaluation criterion for information system designs.
Finally, we mention several fundamental implications of adopting the PIPE model
for personalization and when it is (and is not) applicable.Comment: Comprehensive overview of the PIPE model for personalizatio
Visualizing and Interacting with Concept Hierarchies
Concept Hierarchies and Formal Concept Analysis are theoretically well
grounded and largely experimented methods. They rely on line diagrams called
Galois lattices for visualizing and analysing object-attribute sets. Galois
lattices are visually seducing and conceptually rich for experts. However they
present important drawbacks due to their concept oriented overall structure:
analysing what they show is difficult for non experts, navigation is
cumbersome, interaction is poor, and scalability is a deep bottleneck for
visual interpretation even for experts. In this paper we introduce semantic
probes as a means to overcome many of these problems and extend usability and
application possibilities of traditional FCA visualization methods. Semantic
probes are visual user centred objects which extract and organize reduced
Galois sub-hierarchies. They are simpler, clearer, and they provide a better
navigation support through a rich set of interaction possibilities. Since probe
driven sub-hierarchies are limited to users focus, scalability is under control
and interpretation is facilitated. After some successful experiments, several
applications are being developed with the remaining problem of finding a
compromise between simplicity and conceptual expressivity
Virtual reality in theatre education and design practice - new developments and applications
The global use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) has already established new approaches to theatre education and research, shifting traditional methods of knowledge delivery towards a more visually enhanced experience, which is especially important for teaching scenography. In this paper, I examine the role of multimedia within the field of theatre studies, with particular focus on the theory and practice of theatre design and education. I discuss various IT applications that have transformed the way we experience, learn and co-create our cultural heritage. I explore a suite of rapidly developing communication and computer-visualization techniques that enable reciprocal exchange between students, theatre performances and artefacts. Eventually, I analyse novel technology-mediated teaching techniques that attempt to provide a new media platform for visually enhanced information transfer. My findings indicate that the recent developments in the personalization of knowledge delivery, and also in student-centred study and e-learning, necessitate the transformation of the learners from passive consumers of digital products to active and creative participants in the learning experience
Discursive design thinking: the role of explicit knowledge in creative architectural design reasoning
The main hypothesis investigated in this paper is based upon the suggestion that the discursive reasoning in architecture supported by an explicit knowledge of spatial configurations can enhance both design productivity and the intelligibility of design solutions. The study consists of an examination of an architect’s performance while solving intuitively a well-defined problem followed by an analysis of the spatial structure of their design solutions. One group of architects will attempt to solve the design problem logically, rationalizing their design decisions by implementing their explicit knowledge of spatial configurations. The other group will use an implicit form of such knowledge arising from their architectural education to reason about their design acts. An integrated model of protocol analysis combining linkography and macroscopic coding is used to analyze the design processes. The resulting design outcomes will be evaluated quantitatively in terms of their spatial configurations. The analysis appears to show that an explicit knowledge of the rules of spatial configurations, as possessed by the first group of architects can partially enhance their function-driven judgment producing permeable and well-structured spaces. These findings are particularly significant as they imply that an explicit rather than an implicit knowledge of the fundamental rules that make a layout possible can lead to a considerable improvement in both the design process and product. This suggests that by externalizing th
Studying web 2.0 interactivity: a research framework and two case studies
With more than one third of the world’s population being online, the Internet has increasingly become part of modern living, giving rise to popular literature that often takes a teleological and celebratory perspective, heralding the Internet and Web 2.0 specifically, as an enabler of participation, democracy, and interactivity. However, one should not take these technological affordances of Web 2.0 for granted. This article applies an interaction framework to the analysis of two Web 2.0 websites viewed as spaces where interaction goes beyond the mere consultation and selection of content, i.e., as spaces supporting the (co)creation of content and value. The authors’ approach to interactivity seeks to describe websites in objective, structural terms as spaces of user, document, and website affordances. The framework also makes it possible to talk about the websites in subjective, functional terms, considering them as spaces of perceived inter-action, intra-action and outer-action affordances. Analysis finds that both websites provide numerous user, document, and website affordances that can serve as inter-action or social affordances
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