Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Spatial data fusion with visual feedback

Electronic data

View graph of relations

Spatial data fusion with visual feedback

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

Spatial data fusion with visual feedback. / Schmidt, Nikita; Sas, Corina; Barnett-Cormack, Sam.
2006. Paper presented at British HCI Workshop on Interactive Visualisation.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Schmidt, N, Sas, C & Barnett-Cormack, S 2006, 'Spatial data fusion with visual feedback', Paper presented at British HCI Workshop on Interactive Visualisation, 12/09/06.

APA

Schmidt, N., Sas, C., & Barnett-Cormack, S. (2006). Spatial data fusion with visual feedback. Paper presented at British HCI Workshop on Interactive Visualisation.

Vancouver

Schmidt N, Sas C, Barnett-Cormack S. Spatial data fusion with visual feedback. 2006. Paper presented at British HCI Workshop on Interactive Visualisation.

Author

Schmidt, Nikita ; Sas, Corina ; Barnett-Cormack, Sam. / Spatial data fusion with visual feedback. Paper presented at British HCI Workshop on Interactive Visualisation.6 p.

Bibtex

@conference{72c50e286eb14b63aea1ef9b6b590ca7,
title = "Spatial data fusion with visual feedback",
abstract = "This paper outlines our ongoing work towards developing a system for extracting patterns embedded in heterogeneous data streams that contain people{\textquoteright}s recorded movements in both physical and virtual spaces. Examples of such spatial data sources are satellite-based sensors (GPS), ultrasound acoustic trackers, radio frequency (WLAN, Bluetooth, UWB) and infrared-based sensors. The core work on pattern extraction relies on the spatial data fusion component aiming to bring various data types to a common format. The additional benefit of this system will consist in the graphical interface that will enable interactive visualisation of the extracted patterns. The rationale of this work is outlined through the relevance of location aware system in the context of ubiquitous computing, which so far have received limited benefits from fields such as Human Computer Interaction (HCI) and interactive visualisation. ",
author = "Nikita Schmidt and Corina Sas and Sam Barnett-Cormack",
year = "2006",
language = "English",
note = "British HCI Workshop on Interactive Visualisation ; Conference date: 12-09-2006",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Spatial data fusion with visual feedback

AU - Schmidt, Nikita

AU - Sas, Corina

AU - Barnett-Cormack, Sam

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - This paper outlines our ongoing work towards developing a system for extracting patterns embedded in heterogeneous data streams that contain people’s recorded movements in both physical and virtual spaces. Examples of such spatial data sources are satellite-based sensors (GPS), ultrasound acoustic trackers, radio frequency (WLAN, Bluetooth, UWB) and infrared-based sensors. The core work on pattern extraction relies on the spatial data fusion component aiming to bring various data types to a common format. The additional benefit of this system will consist in the graphical interface that will enable interactive visualisation of the extracted patterns. The rationale of this work is outlined through the relevance of location aware system in the context of ubiquitous computing, which so far have received limited benefits from fields such as Human Computer Interaction (HCI) and interactive visualisation.

AB - This paper outlines our ongoing work towards developing a system for extracting patterns embedded in heterogeneous data streams that contain people’s recorded movements in both physical and virtual spaces. Examples of such spatial data sources are satellite-based sensors (GPS), ultrasound acoustic trackers, radio frequency (WLAN, Bluetooth, UWB) and infrared-based sensors. The core work on pattern extraction relies on the spatial data fusion component aiming to bring various data types to a common format. The additional benefit of this system will consist in the graphical interface that will enable interactive visualisation of the extracted patterns. The rationale of this work is outlined through the relevance of location aware system in the context of ubiquitous computing, which so far have received limited benefits from fields such as Human Computer Interaction (HCI) and interactive visualisation.

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - British HCI Workshop on Interactive Visualisation

Y2 - 12 September 2006

ER -