1,306 research outputs found
Mixed Reality Architecture: Concept, Construction, Use
Mixed Reality Architecture (MRA) dynamically links and overlays physical and virtual spaces. This paper investigates the topology of and the relationships between the components of MRA. As a phenomenon, MRA takes its place in a long history of technologies that have influenced conditions for social interaction as well as the environment we build around us. However, by providing a flexible spatial topology spanning physical and virtual environments it presents new opportunities for social interaction across electronic media. An experimental MRA is described that allowed us to study some of the emerging issues in this field. It provided material for the development of a framework describing virtual and physical spaces, the links between those and the types of mixed reality structure that we can envisage it being possible to design using these elements. We propose that by re-introducing a level of spatiality into communication across physical and virtual environments MRA will support everyday social interaction, and may convert digital communication media from being socially conservative to a more generative form familiar from physical space
Dual Fabry-Perot filter for measurement of CO rotational spectra: design and application to the CO spectrum of Venus
We present the design of a harmonic resonant filter that can be used with a Fourier transform spectrometer (FTS) for simultaneous measurement of a series of lines in the CO rotational ladder. To enable studies of both broad CO absorptions in Venus and modestly red-shifted CO emission from external galaxies, relatively broad (approximately 10-30-GHz FWHM) transmission passbands are desirable. Because a single low-finesse Fabry Perot (FP) etalon has insufficient interline rejection, a dual-FP etalon was considered. Such a design provides significantly better interband rejection and somewhat more flattopped transmission spikes. A prototype filter of this type, made of two thin silicon disks spaced by an air gap, has been constructed and used with our FTS at the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory for simultaneous measurement of the four submillimeter CO transitions in the atmosphere of Venus that are accessible from the ground
Temporal Trajectories in Shared Interactive Narratives
publication-status: Published© ACM, 2008. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of ACM for your personal use. Not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in CHI '08 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, {ISBN 9781605580111, 2008} http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1357054.1357067Temporal trajectories can represent the complex mappings between story time and clock time that are to be found in shared interactive narratives such as computer games and interactive performances. There are three kinds. Canonical trajectories express an author's intended mapping of story time onto clock time as part of the plot and schedule of an experience. Participant trajectories reflect a participant's actual journey through story time and clock time as they interact with the experience. Historic trajectories represent the subsequent selection and reuse of segments of recorded participant trajectories to create histories of past events. We show how temporal trajectories help us analyse the nature of time in existing experiences and can also generate new approaches to dealing with temporal issues such as: disengagement and reengagement, adapting to different paces of interaction, synchronising different participants, and enabling encounters and travel across time
Temporal convergence in shared networked narratives: the case of Blast Theory's Day of the Figurines
types: Article© 2009 ISASTDay of the Figurines, developed by Blast Theory in collaboration with the Mixed Reality Laboratory at Nottingham University, is a massively multiplayer board game for up to a thousand participants. Players can interact remotely with other participants via SMS through their mobile phones from anywhere in the world. Following an analysis of this games complex use of time, the authors introduce a framework structured around five layers of time, from authorial to perceived time, that will facilitate the management and investigation of networked narratives shared by mobile communities over prolonged periods of time
Synergistic erosion/corrosion of superalloys in PFB coal combustor effluent
Two Ni-based superalloys were exposed to the high velocity effluent of a pressurized fluidized bed coal combustor. Targets were 15 cm diameter rotors operating at 40,000 rpm and small flat plate specimens. Above an erosion rate threshold, the targets were eroded to bare metal. The presence of accelerated oxidation at lower erosion rates suggests erosion/corrosion synergism. Various mechanisms which may contribute to the observed oxide growth enhancement include erosive removal of protective oxide layers, oxide and subsurface cracking, and chemical interaction with sulfur in the gas and deposits through damaged surface layers
Supporting ethnographic studies of ubiquitous computing in the wild
Ethnography has become a staple feature of IT research over the last twenty years, shaping our understanding of the social character of computing systems and informing their design in a wide variety of settings. The emergence of ubiquitous computing raises new challenges for ethnography however, distributing interaction across a burgeoning array of small, mobile devices and online environments which exploit invisible sensing systems. Understanding interaction requires ethnographers to reconcile interactions that are, for example, distributed across devices on the street with online interactions in order to assemble coherent understandings of the social character and purchase of ubiquitous computing systems. We draw upon four recent studies to show how ethnographers are replaying system recordings of interaction alongside existing resources such as video recordings to do this and identify key challenges that need to be met to support ethnographic study of ubiquitous computing in the wild
Performing Nature's Footprint
publication-status: Published© 2011 The authors*RCUK funded Horizon projec
Near-Infrared Photometry of the High-Redshift Quasar RDJ030117+002025: Evidence for a Massive Starburst at z=5.5
With a redshift of z=5.5 and an optical blue magnitude M_B ~ -24.2 mag (~4.5
10^12 L_sun), RDJ030117+002025 is the most distant optically faint (M_B > -26
mag) quasar known. MAMBO continuum observations at lambda=1.2 mm (185
micrometer rest-frame) showed that this quasar has a far-IR luminosity
comparable to its optical luminosity. We present near-infrared J- and K-band
photometry obtained with NIRC on the Keck I telescope, tracing the slope of the
rest frame UV spectrum of this quasar. The observed spectral index is close to
the value of alpha_nu ~ -0.44 measured in composite spectra of optically-bright
SDSS quasars. It thus appears that the quasar does not suffer from strong dust
extinction, which further implies that its low rest-frame UV luminosity is due
to an intrinsically-faint AGN. The FIR to optical luminosity ratio is then much
larger than that observed for the more luminous quasars, supporting the
suggestion that the FIR emission is not powered by the AGN but by a massive
starburst.Comment: 6 pages, APJ in pres
MobGeoSen: facilitating personal geosensor data collection and visualization using mobile phones
Mobile sensing and mapping applications are becoming more prevalent because sensing hardware is becoming more portable and more affordable. However, most of the hardware uses small numbers of fixed sensors that report and share multiple sets of environmental data which raises privacy concerns. Instead, these systems can be decentralized and managed by individuals in their public and private spaces. This paper describes a robust system called MobGeoSens which enables individuals to monitor their local environment (e.g. pollution and temperature) and their private spaces (e.g. activities and health) by using mobile phones in their day to day life
From interaction to trajectories: designing coherent journeys through user experience
notes: Best of CHI 2009 Awardpublication-status: PublishedThe idea of interactional trajectories through interfaces has emerged as a sensitizing concept from recent studies of tangible interfaces and interaction in museums and galleries. We put this concept to work as a lens to reflect on
published studies of complex user experiences that extend over space and time and involve multiple roles and
interfaces. We develop a conceptual framework in which trajectories explain these user experiences as journeys
through hybrid structures, punctuated by transitions, and in which interactivity and collaboration are orchestrated. Our
framework is intended to sensitize future studies, help distill craft knowledge into design guidelines and patterns,
identify technology requirements, and provide a boundary object to connect HCI with performance studies
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