open access publication

Conference Paper, 2024

Practice-informed Patterns for Organising Large Groups in Distributed Mixed Reality Collaboration

Proceedings of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, ISBN 9798400703300, Pages 1-18, 10.1145/3613904.3642502

Contributors

Wong, Emily [1] Esquivel, Juan Sánchez [2] Leiva, Germán 0000-0003-4307-9567 [2] Grønbæk, Jens Emil Sloth 0000-0002-9566-7195 [1] [2] Velloso, Eduardo 0000-0003-4414-2249 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Melbourne
  2. [NORA names: Australia; Oceania; OECD];
  3. [2] Aarhus University
  4. [NORA names: AU Aarhus University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Collaborating across dissimilar, distributed spaces presents numerous challenges for computer-aided spatial communication. Mixed reality (MR) can blend selected surfaces, allowing collaborators to work in blended f-formations (facing formations), even when their workstations are physically misaligned. Since collaboration often involves more than just participant pairs, this research examines how we might scale MR experiences for large-group collaboration. To do so, this study recruited collaboration designers (CDs) to evaluate and reimagine MR for large-scale collaboration. These CDs were engaged in a four-part user study that involved a technology probe, a semi-structured interview, a speculative low-fidelity prototyping activity and a validation session. The outcomes of this paper contribute (1) a set of collaboration design principles to inspire future computer-supported collaborative work, (2) eight collaboration patterns for blended f-formations and collaboration at scale and (3) theoretical implications for f-formations and space-place relationships. As a result, this work creates a blueprint for scaling collaboration across distributed spaces.

Keywords

F-formation, MR experiments, Mixed Reality, activity, collaboration, collaboration patterns, collaborative design, collaborative work, communication, computer-supported collaborative work, design, design principles, distribution space, experiments, formation, group, implications, interviews, large-scale collaboration, larger group, low-fidelity, outcomes, pairs, participant pairs, participants, patterns, principles, probe, prototyping activities, reality, reimagining, relationship, research, results, scale, semi-structured interviews, sessions, space, spatial communication, study, surface, technology, technology probe, theoretical implications, user study, users, validation sessions, validity, work, workstation

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