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Managing multiple spaces

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Published

Standard

Managing multiple spaces. / Dix, Alan; Friday, Adrian; Rodden, Tom et al.
Spaces, Spatiality and Technology. ed. / Phil Turner; Elisabeth Davenport. Springer, 2005.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Dix, A, Friday, A, Rodden, T, Koleva, B, Muller, H, Randell, C, Steed, A & EPSRC (Funder) 2005, Managing multiple spaces. in P Turner & E Davenport (eds), Spaces, Spatiality and Technology. Springer. <http://www.cs.bris.ac.uk/Publications/pub_info.jsp?id=2000210>

APA

Dix, A., Friday, A., Rodden, T., Koleva, B., Muller, H., Randell, C., Steed, A., & EPSRC (Funder) (2005). Managing multiple spaces. In P. Turner, & E. Davenport (Eds.), Spaces, Spatiality and Technology Springer. http://www.cs.bris.ac.uk/Publications/pub_info.jsp?id=2000210

Vancouver

Dix A, Friday A, Rodden T, Koleva B, Muller H, Randell C et al. Managing multiple spaces. In Turner P, Davenport E, editors, Spaces, Spatiality and Technology. Springer. 2005

Author

Dix, Alan ; Friday, Adrian ; Rodden, Tom et al. / Managing multiple spaces. Spaces, Spatiality and Technology. editor / Phil Turner ; Elisabeth Davenport. Springer, 2005.

Bibtex

@inbook{adb424d8874043f9b0c7daa506386707,
title = "Managing multiple spaces",
abstract = "This paper is about our experiences of space in the Equator project (www.equator.ac.uk), in particular, the way in which multiple spaces, both virtual and physical, can co-exist. By this we mean that people and objects may have locations in and relationships to both physical space and one or more virtual spaces, and that these different spaces together interact to give an overall system behaviour and user experience. The concepts we develop in this chapter are driven partly by practical experience, and partly by previous theoretical work such as the models and taxonomies of spatial context in (Dix et al., 2000), the models for mixed reality boundaries (Koleva et al., 1999) and capturing human spatial understanding exposed in sources such maps, myths and mathematics (Dix, 2000). We are also building on established work on informal reasoning about space from the AI and GIS communities (Grigni et al, 1995; Papadias et al., 1996) similar to Allen{\textquoteright}s well known temporal relations (Allen, 1991).",
keywords = "Wearables cs_eprint_id, 1056 cs_uid, 1",
author = "Alan Dix and Adrian Friday and Tom Rodden and Boriana Koleva and Henk Muller and Cliff Randell and Anthony Steed and {EPSRC (Funder)}",
year = "2005",
month = jul,
language = "English",
isbn = "1-4020-3272-2",
editor = "Phil Turner and Elisabeth Davenport",
booktitle = "Spaces, Spatiality and Technology",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Managing multiple spaces

AU - Dix, Alan

AU - Friday, Adrian

AU - Rodden, Tom

AU - Koleva, Boriana

AU - Muller, Henk

AU - Randell, Cliff

AU - Steed, Anthony

AU - EPSRC (Funder)

PY - 2005/7

Y1 - 2005/7

N2 - This paper is about our experiences of space in the Equator project (www.equator.ac.uk), in particular, the way in which multiple spaces, both virtual and physical, can co-exist. By this we mean that people and objects may have locations in and relationships to both physical space and one or more virtual spaces, and that these different spaces together interact to give an overall system behaviour and user experience. The concepts we develop in this chapter are driven partly by practical experience, and partly by previous theoretical work such as the models and taxonomies of spatial context in (Dix et al., 2000), the models for mixed reality boundaries (Koleva et al., 1999) and capturing human spatial understanding exposed in sources such maps, myths and mathematics (Dix, 2000). We are also building on established work on informal reasoning about space from the AI and GIS communities (Grigni et al, 1995; Papadias et al., 1996) similar to Allen’s well known temporal relations (Allen, 1991).

AB - This paper is about our experiences of space in the Equator project (www.equator.ac.uk), in particular, the way in which multiple spaces, both virtual and physical, can co-exist. By this we mean that people and objects may have locations in and relationships to both physical space and one or more virtual spaces, and that these different spaces together interact to give an overall system behaviour and user experience. The concepts we develop in this chapter are driven partly by practical experience, and partly by previous theoretical work such as the models and taxonomies of spatial context in (Dix et al., 2000), the models for mixed reality boundaries (Koleva et al., 1999) and capturing human spatial understanding exposed in sources such maps, myths and mathematics (Dix, 2000). We are also building on established work on informal reasoning about space from the AI and GIS communities (Grigni et al, 1995; Papadias et al., 1996) similar to Allen’s well known temporal relations (Allen, 1991).

KW - Wearables cs_eprint_id

KW - 1056 cs_uid

KW - 1

M3 - Chapter

SN - 1-4020-3272-2

BT - Spaces, Spatiality and Technology

A2 - Turner, Phil

A2 - Davenport, Elisabeth

PB - Springer

ER -