Iess10 I 2 Avs@Iess1 0 Presentation V0 4
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Transcript of Iess10 I 2 Avs@Iess1 0 Presentation V0 4
Usage-centered design of adaptable visualization services. Application to cooperation support services system in the AEC sector.
1 Public Research Centre Henri Tudor, Luxembourg 2 Research Centre in Architecture and Engineering (CRAI), France
Sylvain Kubicki1 and Gilles Halin2
Overview
Introduction − Service innovation in construction sector
Adaptable Visualization Services (AVS)
Usage-based AVS design
A first case study
Conclusion
February 17, 2010 IESS 1.0 2010
Introduction
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Service innovation in Architecture, Engineering and Construction (AEC) Sector
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Specificities of the AEC sector
Building life-cycle overview
Main characteristics of the construction sector − Only one object produced − Short-lived teams − Independent and heterogeneous actors − Wide range of models and methods
More and more viewpoints − Restricted areas of responsibility − Internal strategies vs. project strategies
“Ray & Maria Stata Center for CIIS, MIT” Arch. Gehry Partners
Dresden station, Germany Arch. Foster and Partners
Planning Design Construction Use
Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion February 17, 2010 IESS 1.0 2010
Cooperation between actors
Cooperation is essential − To ensure project success − Difficulties
● Low predictable environment ● Communications not standardized
− Groupware solutions remain under-used
Service-based innovation − Cooperation support business
services − Sustainable Service Innovation
Process S2IP
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
Developed in CRPHT Luxembourg − Applied to Business Services design in construction sector: Build-IT
project [Kubicki et al. 2009]
− In partnership with CRTI-B (a professional standardization organization)
Service
Value
Service
Design
Service
Exposi4on
Service
Management
Service
Capitaliza4on
Sustainable Service Innovation Process - S2IP
[Kubicki et al. 2009] Kubicki S., Dubois E., Halin G. and Guerriero A. (2009) Towards a Sustainable Services Innovation in the Construction Sector. CAISE, 21st International Conference on Advanced Information Systems. 8-12 June 2009. Amsterdam. LNCS 5565, pp. 319–333, 2009. February 17, 2010 IESS 1.0 2010
- Work practices standardization
- Services platform
prototyping - Pilot projects
experiments
- Requirements for commercial
platform - MDE approach
for rapid prototyping
- IPR management (“CRTI-weB”
trademark + open-source)
- Transfer to the sector (call for
tender) - Assessment of service delivery
(metrics)
- Feedback (users + SSII)
- Managing services evolution
Service value related processes
Focus on experiments of Business Services − Real construction projects (pilot-projects) − Aims
● Validating business services design ● First step of a sectorial change
management ● Standardization (practices + services)
Other results − Basic Human Computer Interfaces: − Interviews have shown that visualization
has to be adapted to its users… and their particular needs
Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
School – Luxembourg Cents
Student project
Student project
Offices/Hotel– Luxembourg Kirchberg
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Part I
Adaptable Visualization Services
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Current visualization
modes
Emerging visualization
modes
Viewpoints and visualization
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
The concept of usage
Users needs related to − Their role in the cooperative activity
• e.g. in AEC: architect, engineer, owner of a building…
− Available business services in the collective project
Example of usage: architect need − Searching for specific documents in order to check
their consistency with main architectural plans
Defining usages − …As guidelines in User Interface (UI) design
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Usage centered UI design
Usage centered [Constantine & Lookwood 2003]
− Software Engineering approach − Task oriented − Based on a collection of models − Incremental design with interconnected models
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
Adaptable and adaptive UI design
In Human-Computer Interface domain − Adaptable UI can be modified by users − Adaptive UI changes without explicit intervention of users
Emergent UI design by models − « To design once and generate many times » − Modeling different contexts of use (CU) − Modeling user interface elements evolution − Based on differents models: CU (user, platform, environment),
domain (task, concept), UI (elements)... [Sottet, J. et al. 2006]
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
From adaptive UI to Adaptable Visualization Service
Adaptive UI design − Simple user interface − In individual activity situations
UI design for collective activity − Another context : the actor context in the activity − Each actor has his own point of view
• A point of view : a set of visualization modes • Adapted to different usages
− Our approach • Supporting viewpoint building by usage • Choosing among a set of Adaptable Visualization Services
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
Adaptable Visualization Service
Visualization services − Visualize a collection of information − Remote service offering added value − Dedicated to a particular scientific domain − Useful for interpretation of a large volume of data − In an individual or collective visualization activity
Visualization Service design − Based on the concept of “dataflow” or “pipeline”
• Data filtering, geometric transformation, image rendering − Adaptable Visualization Services design is emerging [Hocová, P. et al. 2008]
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
Part II
Usage-based Adaptable Visualization Service design
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Usage-centered AVS design method
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Model-driven approach
Fundamental concepts of Model Driven Engineering (MDE)
− System [is represented by] Model [conforms to] Metamodel
− Transformations between models represented by
conforms to
Our needs : - Modeling usages and AVS
• From Business services and cooperation context models (past and ongoing works)
- By defining metamodels mappings
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
Usage-centered AVS design method
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
Usage – AVS models mapping
Focus on usage – AVS models mapping − Identifying possible AVS applicable in particular
usages
Mapping usages and AVS attributes − According to their metamodels
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Part III
A first case study
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Inspired from our previous experiments − Groupware service system for construction
Example of usage − “Searching a document” − Ex. “I need the last meeting report”, ”I want to see a
picture of the project ”
Actual technique in the system − Searching in document tables − Filtering
Case study
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
Example : searching a document
Innovative AVS: Treemap + Cowerflow − Usage – AVS attributes mapping
Usage AVS
Role concerned Architect AVS Name Treemap + Coverflow
Name Searching a document
Main concept Document with normalized name
Structure Hierarchic structure of
variable surfaces, different colors Sub-concept Type, author
Information Quantity
Searching between a lot of documents, different quantity
with actors
Graphical attributes
High quantity of information with
proportional surfaces
Usage Frequency Rare Usability Easy practice, rapid learning
Context At office, on desktop computer
Required device
More efficiency on large interface
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
"Treemap + coverflow" alternative AVS
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
"Treemap + coverflow" alternative AVS
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Conclusion
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Example validation steps
Usages validation − 37 architect-specific usages identified − First step of validation based on pilot-projects + interviews − Work still in progress
AVS validation − AVS implemented in E.V.A. prototype − Experiments process
● Testing task ● Final scenario
− 17 experimenters confirmed the usage – AVS mapping − Experiment technique to be improved
Next steps − Improvement of usage and AVS metamodels
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Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
Introduction Adaptable Visualization Services AVS Design Case study Conclusion
S2IP for Adaptable Visualization Service design
Service
Value
Service
Design
Service
Exposi4on
Service
Management
Service
Capitaliza4on
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Conclusion
- Usage - Model-driven AVS design - Experiment with real users - Prototyping
Prospects
Next steps to be defined in applied research project…
Requires a platform providing Adaptable Visualization Services
Thank You for your attention
Questions ?
Usage-centered design of adaptable visualization services. Application to cooperation support services system in the AEC sector.
Sylvain Kubicki & Gilles Halin