Exploring and visualizing the impact of multiple shared displays on collocated meeting practices

A tremendous amount of information is produced in the world around us, both as a product of our daily lives and as artifacts of our everyday work. An emerging area of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) focuses on helping individuals manage this flood of information. Prior research shows that multiple...

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Main Author: Plaue, Christopher M.
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/29656
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-296562013-01-07T20:32:49ZExploring and visualizing the impact of multiple shared displays on collocated meeting practicesPlaue, Christopher M.MeetingsCollaborationShared displaysHuman-computer interactionInformation display systemsGroupware (Computer software)Information visualizationA tremendous amount of information is produced in the world around us, both as a product of our daily lives and as artifacts of our everyday work. An emerging area of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) focuses on helping individuals manage this flood of information. Prior research shows that multiple displays can improve an individual user's ability to deal with large amounts of information, but it is unclear whether these advantages extend for teams of people. This is particularly relevant as more employees are spending large portions of their workdays in meetings My contribution to HCI research is empirical fieldwork and laboratory studies investigating how multiple shared displays improve aspects of teamwork. In particular, I present an insight-based evaluation method for analyzing how teams collaborate on a data-intensive sensemaking task. Using this method, I show how the presence and location of multiple shared displays impacted the meeting process with respect to performance, collaboration, and satisfaction. I also illustrate how multiple shared displays engaged team members who might not have otherwise contributed to the collaboration process. Finally, I present Mimosa, a software tool developed to visualize large volumes of time series data. Mimosa combines aspects of information visualization with data analysis, facilitating a deep and iterative exploration of relationships within large datasets.Georgia Institute of Technology2009-08-26T17:35:48Z2009-08-26T17:35:48Z2009-05-18Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/29656
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Meetings
Collaboration
Shared displays
Human-computer interaction
Information display systems
Groupware (Computer software)
Information visualization
spellingShingle Meetings
Collaboration
Shared displays
Human-computer interaction
Information display systems
Groupware (Computer software)
Information visualization
Plaue, Christopher M.
Exploring and visualizing the impact of multiple shared displays on collocated meeting practices
description A tremendous amount of information is produced in the world around us, both as a product of our daily lives and as artifacts of our everyday work. An emerging area of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) focuses on helping individuals manage this flood of information. Prior research shows that multiple displays can improve an individual user's ability to deal with large amounts of information, but it is unclear whether these advantages extend for teams of people. This is particularly relevant as more employees are spending large portions of their workdays in meetings My contribution to HCI research is empirical fieldwork and laboratory studies investigating how multiple shared displays improve aspects of teamwork. In particular, I present an insight-based evaluation method for analyzing how teams collaborate on a data-intensive sensemaking task. Using this method, I show how the presence and location of multiple shared displays impacted the meeting process with respect to performance, collaboration, and satisfaction. I also illustrate how multiple shared displays engaged team members who might not have otherwise contributed to the collaboration process. Finally, I present Mimosa, a software tool developed to visualize large volumes of time series data. Mimosa combines aspects of information visualization with data analysis, facilitating a deep and iterative exploration of relationships within large datasets.
author Plaue, Christopher M.
author_facet Plaue, Christopher M.
author_sort Plaue, Christopher M.
title Exploring and visualizing the impact of multiple shared displays on collocated meeting practices
title_short Exploring and visualizing the impact of multiple shared displays on collocated meeting practices
title_full Exploring and visualizing the impact of multiple shared displays on collocated meeting practices
title_fullStr Exploring and visualizing the impact of multiple shared displays on collocated meeting practices
title_full_unstemmed Exploring and visualizing the impact of multiple shared displays on collocated meeting practices
title_sort exploring and visualizing the impact of multiple shared displays on collocated meeting practices
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/29656
work_keys_str_mv AT plauechristopherm exploringandvisualizingtheimpactofmultipleshareddisplaysoncollocatedmeetingpractices
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