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[Commlist] PhD in Collaborative asynchronous virtual reality
Thu Feb 09 20:01:46 GMT 2023
We are pleased to announce that we are seeking candidates for a PhD
position in asynchronous virtual reality at the Department of Computer
Science at Kingston University, London (See below for description of
project).
The deadline for application is 8th March 2023
Starting date: October 2023
Application instructions:
https://www.kingston.ac.uk/faculties/science-engineering-and-computing/research/research-degrees/grs-studentships/
<https://www.kingston.ac.uk/faculties/science-engineering-and-computing/research/research-degrees/grs-studentships/>
Contact: (g.mills /at/ kingston.ac.uk) <mailto:(g.mills /at/ kingston.ac.uk)>
*Description of project: *
Collaborating with others is an essential part of work and play, and
digital platforms that facilitate remote collaboration are becoming ever
more important. This is due to an increased reliance of companies on
teams distributed around the globe, a growing awareness of
sustainability concerns about travel, as well as adoption of
remote-working practices in the aftermath of Covid-19.
Such globally-distributed teamwork typically involves tasks and
personnel distributed over different time zones, which requires that
systems support asynchronous work-practices. Importantly, asynchronous
collaboration has several advantages over synchronous collaboration, as
it increases the ability of teams to work in parallel and to coordinate
flexibly on time-management, while also giving teams more time to review
and reflect on the tasks at hand. Currently, instant messaging platforms
such as Slack and WhatsApp natively support asynchronous interactions,
while groupware such as Microsoft Office, Google Workspace and GitHub
provide rich sets of tools for large groups of distributed teams to
coordinate.
However, despite the importance and ubiquity of asynchronous
collaboration, there are currently no commercially available virtual or
augmented reality platforms (XR) supporting asynchronous collaboration.
The main reason is that, although the interaction design criteria for
standard groupware are well established, building such platforms in XR
requires addressing multiple interrelated Human-Computer Interaction
challenges in 3D space whose constraints and affordances are still
poorly understood in contrast to those of instant messaging.
There is now an urgent need to investigate how to provide such
functionality in XR. Arguably, the biggest conceptual and technological
hurdle is that, unlike standard platforms which are designed to support
the exchange of simple messages (e.g., text, audio, video), in
asynchronous XR, the transmitted "messages" consist of detailed
recordings of avatars interacting with each other and the artefacts in
the virtual environment. A system supporting such interactions must
provide users with the ability to edit, integrate, and reconcile
multiple past histories of interactions, within the current interaction.
The overall aim of this project is to design, build and evaluate an
asynchronous XR platform fulfilling these goals. The PhD will address
one or more of the following challenges:
1. How should the platform provide users with a representation of the
current interaction record, as well as past interaction(s) to, e.g., to
support users in identifying, signalling, and recovering from
miscommunication?
2. How should the platform allow users to interact with the
representation of past interactions, e.g. pausing, replaying, comparing,
and resuming? Groupware such as GitHub and Word provide fine-grained
tools for users to meticulously integrate their modifications.
Analogously, how should an XR interface be designed to support users to
collaboratively edit and resolve spatio-temporal conflicts between
multiple realities?
3. How should the platform provide users with the ability to collaborate
within and transition between multiple different realities?
Candidates should have strong programming skills (e.g. C++, Unity, or
Unreal) and an interest in psychology and human-computer interaction.
Supervisor: Dr Gregory Mills (g.mills /at/ kingston.ac.uk)
<mailto:(g.mills /at/ kingston.ac.uk)>
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