Using Speech to Visualise Shared Gaze Cues in MR Remote Collaboration
Allison Jing, Gun Lee, Mark Billinghurst
Abstract
In this paper, we present a 360° panoramic Mixed Reality (MR) sys-tem that visualises shared gaze cues using contextual speech input to improve task coordination. We conducted two studies to evaluate the design of the MR gaze-speech interface exploring the combinations of visualisation style and context control level. Findings from the first study suggest that an explicit visual form that directly connects the collaborators’ shared gaze to the contextual conversation is preferred. The second study indicates that the gaze-speech modality shortens the coordination time to attend to the shared interest, making the communication more natural and the collaboration more effective. Qualitative feedback also suggest that having a constant joint gaze indicator provides a consistent bi-directional view while establishing a sense of co-presence during task collaboration. We discuss the implications for the design of collaborative MR systems and directions for future research.