DocumentCode
1648696
Title
Investigating the application of virtual environment technology for use in the petroleum exploration industry
Author
Nesbitt, K.V. ; Gallimore, Randall J. ; Orenstein, Bernard J.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Newcastle Univ., NSW, Australia
fYear
2000
fDate
6/22/1905 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
181
Lastpage
188
Abstract
Although the concepts of virtual environments or virtual reality have been researched for many years, the industrial application of these concepts is a relatively recent event in the evolution of the human-computer interface. This paper outlines an investigation by a commercial research organization (BHP Research) into the applications of this technology. The major domain under investigation was that of petroleum exploration. The focus of the research was two-fold, namely, the use of virtual environments to enable multi-sensory interpretation of data and the ability of virtual environments to enhance collaboration amongst work teams. Appraisal was conducted by trialing the applications amongst a wide user base. While it is not possible to divulge in full the recommendations that resulted from this work, a number of observations are made about the use of this technology for petroleum exploration. Furthermore, various general implications for the use of this technology are discussed
Keywords
geophysics computing; petroleum industry; virtual reality; BHP Research; human-computer interface; petroleum exploration; virtual environment; virtual reality; Biomedical imaging; Computational modeling; Industrial training; Marine technology; Medical simulation; Petroleum industry; Prototypes; Psychology; Testing; Virtual environment;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Science Conference, 2000. ACSC 2000. 23rd Australasian
Conference_Location
Canberra, ACT
Print_ISBN
0-7695-0518-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ACSC.2000.824400
Filename
824400
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