5 research outputs found

    Move Your Body: Engaging Museum Visitors with Human-Data Interaction

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    Museums have embraced embodied interaction: its novelty generates buzz and excitement among their patrons, and it has enormous educational potential. Human-Data Interaction (HDI) is a class of embodied interactions that enables people to explore large sets of data using interactive visualizations that users control with gestures and body movements. In museums, however, HDI installations have no utility if visitors do not engage with them. In this paper, we present a quasi-experimental study that investigates how different ways of representing the user ("mode type") next-to a data visualization alters the way in which people engage with a HDI system. We consider four mode types: avatar, skeleton, camera overlay, and control. Our findings indicate that the mode type impacts the number of visitors that interact with the installation, the gestures that people do, and the amount of time that visitors spend observing the data on display and interacting with the system

    Integrating Telecom Outside Plant Systems Through the GML Standard

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    This paper introduces the Telecommunication Outside Plant Markup Language (TOPML), an OpenGis GML (Geographic Markup Language) application schema designed to describe telecommunication outside plant data in which geographical information is an important issue. TOPML uses the standard OpenGis GML schema to include geographic properties to georeferenced telecom network elements. The use of TOPML can be a key factor for cost reduction on data gathering, conversion process of georeferenced data and system integration. By using TOPML, telecom systems can now communicate in different ways such as Web Services. The TOPML can be transformed into an SVG format, allowing geographic data visualization in the Internet. Additionally, with TOPML and the definition of services following the OpenGIS specifications, the telecom outside plant systems can move towards a standard interoperable environment. The results of this paper are being implemented in the CPqD Outside Plant System, a geographical information system that automates the telecommunications outside plant management
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