• DocumentCode
    105454
  • Title

    Supporting Virtual Collaboration in Spatial Design Tasks: Are Surrogate or Natural Gestures More Effective?

  • Author

    Cornelius, Caroline J. ; Nguyen, Mai Anh ; Hayes, Caroline C. ; Makena, Roopa

  • Author_Institution
    Epic Syst., Madison, WI, USA
  • Volume
    43
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    Jan. 2013
  • Firstpage
    92
  • Lastpage
    101
  • Abstract
    Hand gestures offer a rich source of information for communication of spatial concepts. However, gestures are often lost when people work together in virtual space. Gestures may be conveyed in virtual spaces through many approaches, for example by drawing circles and arrows around objects on a shared screen, or using natural, real-time videos of a distant collaborator´s hands or body. The first is an example of “surrogate” gestures and the second of “natural” gestures. The first is relatively inexpensive but requires users take some effort to draw and erase temporary symbols; the second is more costly but also more expressive and natural. This work will: 1) provide a brief, high-level framework characterizing tools that support virtual gestures; and 2) present an experimental study comparing the cognitive effort required when using sketched surrogate gestures versus natural gestures in a virtual mechanical design tasks. The larger goal is to understand whether the additional cost to support natural gestures is warranted, thus informing the design of future virtual collaboration tools. We recruited 24 participants and asked them to collaborate using three different approaches: face-to-face (as a baseline), virtual-sketching (which allows users to make gestural sketches on their drawings), and virtual-sketching with natural hand videos projected on the drawing surface. We found that users´ cognitive workload was significantly reduced when natural hand videos were added to a virtual-sketching environment. These results suggest that the ease and expressivity of natural gestures provide more benefits than simpler surrogate gestures for virtual mechanical design tasks.
  • Keywords
    computer graphics; gesture recognition; groupware; video signal processing; virtual reality; cognitive effort; hand gestures; high-level framework; natural gestures; natural hand videos; spatial design tasks; surrogate gestures; virtual collaboration; virtual collaboration tools; virtual gestures; virtual mechanical design tasks; virtual spaces; virtual-sketching; Assembly; Cameras; Collaboration; Context; Joints; Real-time systems; Videos; Collaboration; collaborative design; distance engineering; formatting; natural hand gestures;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Human-Machine Systems, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    2168-2291
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TSMCA.2012.2216867
  • Filename
    6392965