Litcius/Paper detail

eyemR-Vis: Using Bi-Directional Gaze Behavioural Cues to Improve Mixed Reality Remote Collaboration

Allison Jing, Kieran May, Mahnoor Naeem, Gun Lee, Mark Billinghurst

202135 citationsDOI

Abstract

Gaze is one of the most important communication cues in face-to-face collaboration. However, in remote collaboration, sharing dynamic gaze information is more difficult. In this research, we investigate how sharing gaze behavioural cues can improve remote collaboration in a Mixed Reality (MR) environment. To do this, we developed eyemR-Vis, a 360 panoramic Mixed Reality remote collaboration system that shows gaze behavioural cues as bi-directional spatial virtual visualisations shared between a local host and a remote collaborator. Preliminary results from an exploratory study indicate that using virtual cues to visualise gaze behaviour has the potential to increase co-presence, improve gaze awareness, encourage collaboration, and is inclined to be less physically demanding or mentally distracting.

Topics & Concepts

GazeVirtual realitySensory cueComputer scienceHuman–computer interactionMixed realityFace (sociological concept)Exploratory researchEye trackingComputer visionArtificial intelligenceSocial scienceAnthropologySociologyVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsAugmented Reality ApplicationsGaze Tracking and Assistive Technology