论文标题
共享表面和空间:在共同介绍的沉浸式环境中可视化的协作数据可视化
Shared Surfaces and Spaces: Collaborative Data Visualisation in a Co-located Immersive Environment
论文作者
论文摘要
沉浸式技术提供了新的机会来支持协作视觉数据分析,通过为每个合作者提供通过头部安装显示的灵活共享可视化空间的个人高分辨率视图。但是,大多数对协作沉浸式分析的研究都集中在群体如何与桌面和墙壁显示等表面界面相互作用上。本文报告了一项研究,在该研究中,由三个共同居住的参与者组成的团队具有灵活的可视化创作工具,以允许他们如何构建共享工作空间。他们使用一种原型系统,我们称为Fiesta:自由漫游的沉浸式环境,以支持基于团队的分析。与传统的可视化工具不同,嘉年华允许用户自由定位在虚拟环境中的任何地方,无论是在虚拟表面上还是在交互空间内悬挂,从而在虚拟环境中的任何地方定位了界面和可视化伪像。我们的参与者在多元数据集上解决了视觉分析任务,通过创建大量的2D和3D可视化来单独和协作。他们的行为表明,表面的用法与所使用的可视化类型相结合,通常使用墙壁来组织2D可视化,但在周围空间中定位3D可视化。在紧密耦合的协作之外,参与者遵循社会协议,即使在所有者的个人工作区之外,也没有与不属于它们的可视化互动。
Immersive technologies offer new opportunities to support collaborative visual data analysis by providing each collaborator a personal, high-resolution view of a flexible shared visualisation space through a head mounted display. However, most prior studies of collaborative immersive analytics have focused on how groups interact with surface interfaces such as tabletops and wall displays. This paper reports on a study in which teams of three co-located participants are given flexible visualisation authoring tools to allow a great deal of control in how they structure their shared workspace. They do so using a prototype system we call FIESTA: the Free-roaming Immersive Environment to Support Team-based Analysis. Unlike traditional visualisation tools, FIESTA allows users to freely position authoring interfaces and visualisation artefacts anywhere in the virtual environment, either on virtual surfaces or suspended within the interaction space. Our participants solved visual analytics tasks on a multivariate data set, doing so individually and collaboratively by creating a large number of 2D and 3D visualisations. Their behaviours suggest that the usage of surfaces is coupled with the type of visualisation used, often using walls to organise 2D visualisations, but positioning 3D visualisations in the space around them. Outside of tightly-coupled collaboration, participants followed social protocols and did not interact with visualisations that did not belong to them even if outside of its owner's personal workspace.