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Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

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Academic conferences provide a social space for people to present their work, learn about others’ work, and interact informally with one another. However, opportunities for interaction are unevenly distributed among the attendees. We seek to extend these opportunities by allowing attendees to easily reveal something about their background and interests in different settings through the use of proactive displays: computer displays coupled with sensors that can sense and respond to the people nearby. We designed, implemented and deployed a suite of proactive display applications at a recent academic conference: AutoSpeakerID augmented formal conference paper sessions; Ticket2Talk augmented informal coffee breaks. A mixture of qualitative observation and survey response data are used to frame the impacts of these applications from both individual and group perspectives, highlighting the creation of new opportunities for both interaction and distraction. We end with a discussion of how these social space augmentations relate to the concepts of focus and nimbus as well as the problem of shared interaction models. More information on this work, including the paper associated with this presentation, can be found here: http://interrelativity.com/proactivedisplays/
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www.proactivedisplays.org Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference Joe McCarthy, David McDonald, Suzanne Soroczak, David Nguyen, Al M. Rashid 8 November 2004
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Page 1: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

www.proactivedisplays.org

Augmenting the Social Spaceof an Academic Conference

Joe McCarthy, David McDonald, Suzanne Soroczak,

David Nguyen, Al M. Rashid

8 November 2004

Page 2: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

2www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

• Social Spaces at Academic Conferences

• Proactive Displays

• Experience UbiComp Project

• Evaluation

• Discussion & Future Work

Outline

Page 3: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

3www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Academic Conferences as Social Spaces

• Conference settings– Specific time, space & focus– Community of people

w/ shared interests

• Different sub-contexts,different social interactions– Formal presentations

(papers, panels)– Semi-formal presentations

(demos, posters)– Informal events

(breaks, receptions)

Page 4: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

4www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Academic Conferences as Social Spaces

• Sites for mutual revelation– Hear what others are doing– Talk about what I’m doing– Professional & personal

• Revelation opportunities are unevenly distributed– Presenters vs. non-presenters– Veterans vs. newcomers

• How can technology help?

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5www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Proactive Displays

• Displays + sensors (+ algorithms + policies + …)– Large displays that can

sense & respond appropriately to the people nearby

• Issues for proactive displays:– Context(s): Where should they go?– Content: What should they show?– Control: How will they know?

Page 6: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

6www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Experience UbiComp Project

• Context(s)– UbiComp 2003

• Fifth International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing• Westin Seattle, 12-15 October

– Paper / panel sessions (AutoSpeakerID)– Coffee breaks (Ticket2Talk)

• Content– Web-based profile database– Name, affiliation, photo(s), …

• Control– Register, activate and wear RFID tags during the conference– Opt out at any time (delete profile, discard tag)

Page 7: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

7www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Proactive Displaysat a Conference

• Design goals– Enhance the sense of community among

attendees– Mesh with existing practices (calm

technology)– Protect the privacy of participants … & non-

participants

Page 8: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

8www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Registration

Page 9: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

9www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Activation

Page 10: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

10www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Experience!AutoSpeakerID

Ticket2Talk

Neighborhood Window

Page 11: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

11www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

AutoSpeakerID

• Keynote/Paper/Panel Q&A “augmentation”– RFID: antenna (microphone), tag (badge)– Display photo, name, affiliation– Visual augmentation of common [oral] practice

Page 12: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

12www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

AutoSpeakerID

Page 13: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

13www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Ticket2Talk

• Coffee Break– Explicitly provided content – Single person (at a time)

Page 14: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

14www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Ticket2Talk

Page 15: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

15www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Ticket2Talk

• Queue Management: balancing freshness & fairness– Tag recency: +

– Ticket recency: -

– Minimize thrashing

– “5 seconds of fame”

NumTickets

terTicketCounNumTicketsw

iodTimeOutPer

agSeenTimeSinceTiodTimeOutPerwP

i

ii

,min2

1

Page 16: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

16www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Sample Tickets

Page 17: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

17www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Sample Tickets

Page 18: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

18www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Evaluation

Page 19: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

19www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Caveats

• Existing communities at conferences– Variations in stature, approachability– Newcomers vs. veterans

• Technological interventions– Complete invisibility is undesirable– Augmentation vs. interference

• Privacy– Human subjects issues

Page 20: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

20www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Setting & Data Collection

• Conference deployment: UbiComp 2003– Medium-sized, single-track, conference– 500 attendees (50% from USA)– Two proactive displays:

• AutoSpeakerID (ASID) • Ticket2Talk (T2T)

• Systematic Observation– Observations + opportunistic interviews

• Post-conference Survey– Mix of multiple choice and open-ended response– 94 respondents (19% response rate)

Page 21: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

21www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Analysis

• Simple descriptive statistics

• Open-ended survey responses– Grounded approach– Open coding (multiple rounds)

Display

Application

Positive

Impact

Negative

Impact

AutoSpeakerID 71 (77%) 10 (11%)

Ticket2Talk 39 (41%) 3 (3%)

Page 22: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

22www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Proactive Displaysat a Conference

• Design goals– Enhance the sense of community among

attendees– Mesh with existing practices (calm

technology)– Protect the privacy of participants … & non-

participants

Page 23: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

23www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Enhance Feeling of Community

• AutoSpeakerID It was nice to be able to see who was speaking to put their question in context if I didn't hear or forgot the person's introduction.

• Ticket2Talk I was chatting with someone I didn't know personally (small talk) about a recent presentation when I noticed his profile on the Ticket 2 Talk display and realized he was affiliated with an organization I really admire and would like to collaborate with ... Noticing this allowed me to redirect the conversation to that topic!

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24www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Mesh with Established Practices

• AutoSpeakerID It seemed distracting - in the sessions I was in it seemed that virtually every person who approached the microphone began by commenting on the speaker ID (e.g. "oh it's working, yes that's me" or "it's not working for some reason").

• Ticket2Talk People walk up with a big smile. Look at the person standing next to

them and again at the display. Is that you?!? One is waving RFID tag in front of reader. Pick me up!

Page 25: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

25www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Manage Privacy Concerns

• Display agnostic (across both applications)– Unconcerned

... it might had been nice that [the research] community directory information was downloaded automatically.

– Concerned I didn't want all this information to be available to everyone - would rather have more control over who gets to see what ... and might want to highlight interests differently to different people.

Page 26: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

26www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Discussion

• AutoSpeakerID– 50% of questioners’ tags detected– Introductions: oral only, visual only, visual + oral– Spelling, intelligibility– “Gaming”

• 3 people, 7 questions• 24 comments in survey (18+, 6-)

Page 27: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

27www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Discussion

• Ticket2Talk– Conversations, awareness

among old & new friends• Amarone, kitesurfing• Scuba diving

– Provocative content

Page 28: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

28www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

New Contexts

• Digital Homes– Implicit sharing

of digital media• Family / visitors’ photos

• Digital Workplaces– Knowledge management

through serendipity• Nameless faces / faceless names

• Digital Third Places…

Page 29: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

29www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

New Contexts

• The Great Good Place:Cafes, Coffee Shops, Bookstores, Bars, Hair Salons, and Other Hangouts at the Heart of a Community

– Ray Oldenburg

Page 30: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

30www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

New Sources of Content

• Repositories

• Devices

Page 31: Proactive Displays: Augmenting the Social Space of an Academic Conference (CSCW 2004)

31www.proactivedisplays.orgMcCarthy, McDonald, et al.

Many thanks!

• Co-authors– Suzi Soroczak (UW Information School)

David Nguyen (Nokia Research) Al M. Rashid (Univ. Minnesota)

• On-site observers (& troubleshooters)– Sabrina Hsueh, John LaMont, Jonathan Lester

• A cast of dozens in numerous supporting roles …– Ken Anderson, Gaetano Borriello, Waylon Brunette, Sunny

Consolvo, Anind Dey, James Gurganus, Michael Ham, Sean Lanksbury, Eric Paulos, Trevor Pering, Pauline Powledge, Adam Rea, Bill Schilit, Ken Smith, …

• … and an attentive audience … Questions?


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