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Sharing control of dispersed situated displays between nand residential users

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paper

Published

Standard

Sharing control of dispersed situated displays between nand residential users. / Kray, Christian; Cheverst, Keith; Fitton, Daniel et al.
MobileHCI '06: Proceedings of the 8th conference on Human-computer interaction with mobile devices and services. New York: ACM, 2006. p. 61-68.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paper

Harvard

Kray, C, Cheverst, K, Fitton, D, Sas, C, Patterson, J, Rouncefield, M & Stahl, C 2006, Sharing control of dispersed situated displays between nand residential users. in MobileHCI '06: Proceedings of the 8th conference on Human-computer interaction with mobile devices and services. ACM, New York, pp. 61-68. https://doi.org/10.1145/1152215.1152229

APA

Kray, C., Cheverst, K., Fitton, D., Sas, C., Patterson, J., Rouncefield, M., & Stahl, C. (2006). Sharing control of dispersed situated displays between nand residential users. In MobileHCI '06: Proceedings of the 8th conference on Human-computer interaction with mobile devices and services (pp. 61-68). ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/1152215.1152229

Vancouver

Kray C, Cheverst K, Fitton D, Sas C, Patterson J, Rouncefield M et al. Sharing control of dispersed situated displays between nand residential users. In MobileHCI '06: Proceedings of the 8th conference on Human-computer interaction with mobile devices and services. New York: ACM. 2006. p. 61-68 doi: 10.1145/1152215.1152229

Author

Kray, Christian ; Cheverst, Keith ; Fitton, Daniel et al. / Sharing control of dispersed situated displays between nand residential users. MobileHCI '06: Proceedings of the 8th conference on Human-computer interaction with mobile devices and services. New York : ACM, 2006. pp. 61-68

Bibtex

@inproceedings{e03106ae67b441abadb1eeb7b2d8d6ec,
title = "Sharing control of dispersed situated displays between nand residential users",
abstract = "As the number of public displays in the environment increases, new opportunities open up to improve situated interaction and to enable new kinds of applications. In order to make distributed display resources available to nomadic users, a key issue to address is how control can be dynamically shared between display users. It is important to study how control over a shared display can be acquired, released or shared by nomadic and residential users given their competing demands for display resources.In this paper, we present a system and a user study investigating these issues in the context of two applications both competing for display resources provided by a deployment of interactive office doorplates. The first application (Hermes II) provides situated note leaving and messaging services whereas the second one (GAUDI) supports user navigating a university department. Office occupants (i.,e. residential users) can control whether the navigation application may (temporarily) use their doorplate display (thus giving priority to the navigation needs of nomadic users to the department). We report on findings from a user study, and discuss interface design implications for specifying display control.",
author = "Christian Kray and Keith Cheverst and Daniel Fitton and Corina Sas and John Patterson and Mark Rouncefield and Christoph Stahl",
year = "2006",
doi = "10.1145/1152215.1152229",
language = "English",
isbn = "1595933905",
pages = "61--68",
booktitle = "MobileHCI '06: Proceedings of the 8th conference on Human-computer interaction with mobile devices and services",
publisher = "ACM",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Sharing control of dispersed situated displays between nand residential users

AU - Kray, Christian

AU - Cheverst, Keith

AU - Fitton, Daniel

AU - Sas, Corina

AU - Patterson, John

AU - Rouncefield, Mark

AU - Stahl, Christoph

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - As the number of public displays in the environment increases, new opportunities open up to improve situated interaction and to enable new kinds of applications. In order to make distributed display resources available to nomadic users, a key issue to address is how control can be dynamically shared between display users. It is important to study how control over a shared display can be acquired, released or shared by nomadic and residential users given their competing demands for display resources.In this paper, we present a system and a user study investigating these issues in the context of two applications both competing for display resources provided by a deployment of interactive office doorplates. The first application (Hermes II) provides situated note leaving and messaging services whereas the second one (GAUDI) supports user navigating a university department. Office occupants (i.,e. residential users) can control whether the navigation application may (temporarily) use their doorplate display (thus giving priority to the navigation needs of nomadic users to the department). We report on findings from a user study, and discuss interface design implications for specifying display control.

AB - As the number of public displays in the environment increases, new opportunities open up to improve situated interaction and to enable new kinds of applications. In order to make distributed display resources available to nomadic users, a key issue to address is how control can be dynamically shared between display users. It is important to study how control over a shared display can be acquired, released or shared by nomadic and residential users given their competing demands for display resources.In this paper, we present a system and a user study investigating these issues in the context of two applications both competing for display resources provided by a deployment of interactive office doorplates. The first application (Hermes II) provides situated note leaving and messaging services whereas the second one (GAUDI) supports user navigating a university department. Office occupants (i.,e. residential users) can control whether the navigation application may (temporarily) use their doorplate display (thus giving priority to the navigation needs of nomadic users to the department). We report on findings from a user study, and discuss interface design implications for specifying display control.

U2 - 10.1145/1152215.1152229

DO - 10.1145/1152215.1152229

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SN - 1595933905

SP - 61

EP - 68

BT - MobileHCI '06: Proceedings of the 8th conference on Human-computer interaction with mobile devices and services

PB - ACM

CY - New York

ER -