93,819 research outputs found
Public and Situated Displays to Support Communities
This workshop will bring together researchers and practitioners working with public displays in communities to share experiences and to identify research themes and issues arising from social and community use of public and situated displays, while increasing awareness of various relevant projects and encouraging collaboration
Pervasive Displays Research: What's Next?
Reports on the 7th ACM International Symposium on Pervasive Displays that took place from June 6-8 in Munich, Germany
Establishing the design knowledge for emerging interaction platforms
While awaiting a variety of innovative interactive products and services to appear in the market in the near future such as interactive tabletops, interactive TVs, public multi-touch walls, and other embedded appliances, this paper calls for preparation for the arrival of such interactive platforms based on their interactivity. We advocate studying, understanding and establishing the foundation for interaction characteristics and affordances and design implications for these platforms which we know will soon emerge and penetrate our everyday lives. We review some of the archetypal interaction platform categories of the future and highlight the current status of the design knowledge-base accumulated to date and the current rate of growth for each of these. We use example designs illustrating design issues and considerations based on the authors’ 12-year experience in pioneering novel applications in various forms and styles
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JuxtaLearn D3.2 Performance Framework
This deliverable, D3.2, for Work Package 3 incorporating the pedagogy from WP2 and orchestration factors mapped in D3.1 reviews aspects of performance in the context of participative video making. It reviews literature on curiosity and engagement characteristics of interaction mechanisms for public displays and anticipates requirements for social network analysis of relevant public videos from WP6 task 6.3. Thus, to support JuxtaLearn performance it proposes a reflective performance framework that encompasses the material environment and objects required, the participants, and the knowledge needed
A socializing interactive installation for the urban environments
In this paper we present the LEDs Urban Carpet: an interactive urban
installation using a body-input as a form of a non-traditional user interface.
The installation was tested in various locations around the city of Bath, UK.
We selected locations with low, medium and high pedestrian flows. The aim is to
generate a novel urban experience, which can be introduced in different
locations in the city and with different social situations.
The installation represents a game with a grid of LEDs that can be embedded as
an interactive carpet into the urban context. A pattern of lights is generated
dynamically following the pedestrians movement over the carpet. In this case
the pedestrians become active participants that influence the generative
process and make the pattern of LED-s change. The paper suggests that
introducing this kind of display in a social scenario can enrich the casual
interaction of people nearby and this might enhance social awareness and
engagement. However, we should point out that a number of factors need to be
taken into consideration when designing an interactive installation, especially
when situated within the urban space.
The experience we present here can assist designers in understanding
difficulties and issues that need to be taken into account during the design of
an interactive urban project of this nature
Analysis domain model for shared virtual environments
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
Space for Two to Think: Large, High-Resolution Displays for Co-located Collaborative Sensemaking
Large, high-resolution displays carry the potential to enhance single display groupware collaborative sensemaking for intelligence analysis tasks by providing space for common ground to develop, but it is up to the visual analytics tools to utilize this space effectively. In an exploratory study, we compared two tools (Jigsaw and a document viewer), which were adapted to support multiple input devices, to observe how the large display space was used in establishing and maintaining common ground during an intelligence analysis scenario using 50 textual documents. We discuss the spatial strategies employed by the pairs of participants, which were largely dependent on tool type (data-centric or function-centric), as well as how different visual analytics tools used collaboratively on large, high-resolution displays impact common ground in both process and solution. Using these findings, we suggest design considerations to enable future co-located collaborative sensemaking tools to take advantage of the benefits of collaborating on large, high-resolution displays
A sense of place and pervasive computing within the urban landscape
In this paper we report on recent investigations within an ongoing research
project, which aims at developing a better understanding of the urban landscape
augmented with the digital landscape in the heritage City of Bath.
Here we describe early findings from the deployment of a socialiasing digital
installation in various locations in the city. The aim is to create a novel
urban experience that triggers shared social encounters among friends,
observes or strangers. The installation is implemented in the form of a digital
urban ground , embeded in the physical surrounding, which acts as a
non-traditional interface and a facilitator between people and people and
people and their surrounding environment .
In this paper we explore the relationship between the urban space and technology
driven encounters. We outline initial findings about how people move, congregate
and socialize around the digital ground and illustrate the impact of the spatial
and syntactical properties on the type of shared interactions in a city context.
Finally we discuss initial results and mention briefly our on going work
Rules of Engagement: design attributes for social interactions
We present a taxonomy for the design of workplace “break” spaces. The taxonomy can be used to identify aspects of current spaces that are either successful or problematic. From this analysis, we demonstrate how the taxonomy can be used to identify opportunities for computer mediated augmentation of spaces, and how such designs can be validated against this taxonomy
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