Initial Project Presentation

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Project Presentation CS6022 Colm Walsh

description

First presentation of my final project idea for the Masters in Interactive Media at University of Limerick, Ireland. Presents motivation, theories researched, similar projects, technology overview

Transcript of Initial Project Presentation

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Project Presentation

CS6022Colm Walsh

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Original Idea

•Interactive space•Designed for dancers/stage performers•Body movements generate visual and audio feedback that can be controlled by user

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What is it about?

Social Interaction

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What is it about?

Social InteractionInteraction with Public Space

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What is it about?

Social InteractionInteraction with Public SpaceIdea of Personal/Intimate Space

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Why?

•Smart Phone culture•An “App for Everything”•Reasons to interact increasingly less•Everyone in their own little world

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Why?

The Bubble Effect

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What do I want to do?

•Burst the “bubble”•Encourage interaction, collaboration and play•In a public space

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Where?

•A Public Space•Consistent Flow of People•Area of Congregation

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Who is it for?

•In a public space, any member of the public is a potential user•In particular places,•Bus station, hotel lobby: people waiting•Pedestrianised street, square: people in transit

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Social Interactions

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Social Interactions

•Strategic Complimentaries: “occur when the marginal utility to one person of undertaking an action is increasing with the average amount of the action taken by his peers.” – Scheinkman, J. A.

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Social Interactions

•Critical Mass Model, Schelling, T.•Some individuals will always do the activity•Others will do it if a high enough fraction of the population is engaged in the action•Still others may never do it

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Social Interactions

•Social Learning Theory, Bandura, A.•Attention•Retention•Reproduction•Motivation

•Reciprocal Determinism

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The Pleasures of Play

•Costello, B., Edmonds, E.•A framework developed as a synthesis of the ideas of six theorists

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The Pleasures of Play

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Previous Projects

The Spacer Bench Eisenberg, A., University of Sydney

•Project aim: encourage people to sit next to people who they have never met

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Previous Projects

The Social Seats Pei-Hong, H., University of Sydney

•Project aim: encourage social interaction

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Previous Projects

Wish Spark Park, S., Nam, T., Lim, Y.S., Florence, Italy

•Project aim: make act of donation a pleasurable, meaningful, fun•DEMO

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Previous Projects

Elysian Fields Costello, B., Gwilt, I. Burraston, D.

•DEMO

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Previous Projects

•Monome•ReacTable

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Technology

•Motion Detection•Video•Audio

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Technology

Pressure Sensitive Floor

•Arduino•Floor divided into grid of cells•Users’ position tracked by sensors

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Technology

Computer Vision Techniques Using Processing

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Technology

Computer Vision Techniques Using Processing

1. Detecting Motion•Brightness and colour of pixels are compared, frame-to-frame•Difference = measure of amount of movement•Depends on relatively stable lighting

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Technology

Computer Vision Techniques Using Processing

2. Detecting Presence•Background subtraction•Background of empty scene stored•Difference in colour represents movement•Sensitive to changes in lighting conditions

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Technology

Computer Vision Techniques Using Processing

3. Brightness Thresholding Detection•Ensure objects of interest are considerably darker/lighter than surroundings•Use Backlighting•Pixel’s brightness compared to threshold value

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Technology

Computer Vision Techniques ADVANCED

1. Infrared illumination2. Retroflective lighting materials3. Telecentric lens

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Technology

Video and Audio Control

• Pure Data and PD GEM (Graphics Environment for Multimedia)

• VVVV: can handle large media environments with physical interfaces, real-time motion graphics, audio and video that can interact with many users simultaneously.

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Technology

Video and Audio Control

• SWARM simulation: provides patterns of motion that are apparently random, but when viewed as a whole exhibit a visual coherence

• Moving object is treated as a force field (gravitational) – centre of the swarm

• DEMO

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Next Steps

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References

Levin, G., 2006. Computer Vision for Artists and Designers: Pedagogic Tools and Techniques for Novice Programmers. Journal of Artificial Intelligence and Society. Vol. 20.4. Springer Verlag.

Costello, B., Edmonds, E. A Study in Play, Pleasure and Interaction Design. Designing Pleasurable Products and Interfaces, 22 – 25 August 2007, Helsinki, Finland.

Moere, A.V., Hill, D. Research through Design in the Context of Teaching Urban Computing. Conference of the Australian Computer-Human Interaction Special Interest Group, 23-27 November 2009, Melbourne, Australia.

Boyd, J.E., Hushlak, G., Jacob, C., 2004. Swarm Art: Interactive Art from Swarm Intelligence. Proceedings of the 12th Annual ACM International Conference on Multimedia. USA: ACM Press.

Park, S., Nam, T., Lim, Y.S., 2008. Creating Social Value of Interactive Media Installation: Case Study of Designing “Wish Spark”. Proceedings of CHI EA ’08. New York, USA: ACM Press.

Learning-Theories.com, http://www.learning-theories.com/social-learning-theory-bandura.html

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Fin