Title: Computermediated Social Awareness and Perception in Everyday Environments
1Computer-mediated Social Awarenessand Perception
in Everyday Environments
- Nitin Sawhney
- Ph.D. Oral Presentation
- June 12, 2000
Orals Committee Chris Schmandt Mark
Ackerman Trevor Darrell
2Motivation Connecting Physical
Communities Everyday Settings
Connected Families
Connected Workspaces
Connected Commuters
3Challenge Design for Changing Social
Distance Everyday Settings
Awareness
Connected Families
Privacy
Communication
Connected Workspaces
Interruption
Connected Commuters
The action is on the Street!
4Research Approach Presentation Outline
- Part I Social Life of the Street
- Self-Expression Behavior in Public Places
- Cognitive Cultural Probes Elderly Settings
- Part II Computer-mediated Social Awareness
- Design of Awareness Spaces Privacy Issues
- Exploratory Prototype Aware Community Portals
- Role of Perception Audio/Visual Scene Analysis
5Part I Social Life of the Street Social
Behavior - Role of Self-Expression, Place, Media
and Culture
Images Source Presence Project, 1997
6Self Expression in Public Erving Goffman 59
- How does an individual in everyday situations
present himself in the presence of people? - Key Notion Theatrical Performance
- Expressive Behavior - Given and Given-Off
- Asymmetry of Communication - cycle of revelation
concealment - Roles and Social Front - Setting, Appearance,
Manner - Region Behavior - Front Stage vs. Back Stage vs.
Outside - Role of Electronic Media Meyrowitz 85
- Blurring prior social roles overlapping
public/private spheres - Patterns of information flow between continuum of
regions
7Social Behavior in Public Places William Whyte
70s-80s Street Life Project
- "What attracts people most, in sum, is other
people many urban spaces are being designed as
though the opposite were true. - Spontaneous Encounters
- High Incidence 30 meetings unplanned
- Conversational Gravity in 100 Locations
- Trajectories of conversations centered around
100 Locations - Dynamic Social Distances
- Crowding makes crowding more tolerable.
- Mayors as Communication Hubs
- Notice regular routines and assure sense of
safety - Design of Spaces
- Supply creates Demand
- Relationship to the Street - Transition Spaces
- Temporal Rhythms and Sense of Place
8Cumulative Sighting Map William Whyte, 1972
The New York Public Library, July 1972 Activity
for 4 days 1230 PM and 130 PM
Source The New York Times / January 2, 2000
9Ethnographic Study of Elderly Communities Altman
83
- Ethnographic Studies of Elderly
- Gerontology Surveys not effective
- View Lifestyles in Personal and Historical
Context - Colton Study - over 4 year period, community of
400 elderly - Rhythm in Space
- Bimodal Pattern of Activity in Surroundings
- Trips meaningful as a Social Activity
- Regularized Daily Routines and Paths - Supportive
Function - Cognition of Space
- Hierarchy of Zones of decreasing intensity away
from home - Surveillance zone, localized social spaces,
community functions - Maintaining Social Context
- Conducive to being well known and knowing others
in community. - Geographic dispersion of family - telephone is
critical medium.
10Cultural Probes Presence, 97-98
- Presence EU-funded project to increase presence
of elderly in community - Three test sites Oslo, Peccioli and Bijlmer
- Two design centers Royal College of Art (U.K.)
Domus (Italy) - Cultural Probes
- Provoke responses from diverse sites for
experimental design - Package of maps, postcards, disposable camera,
media diary - Goal Informal analysis, chance observation,
cultural context - Changing expectations creating a dialogue with
elderly - Results Design Proposals
- Little communication between ethnic groups
- Connect Public Places with A/V links Displays
to publish values - Elderly interest in being a resource to local
community visitors - Neighborhood soft-surveillance informal help
chains reminders - Mediated discussions in libraries and
disseminated via Trams
11Designing for the Street Themes Issues
- Observational Methodology
- Ethnographic approaches for social/cognitive
patterns - Cultural Probes - understanding context/ design
inspiration - Expressive Behavior
- Control over staging of communication
- Recognize different roles and fronts in different
settings - Behavior in Physical Space
- Flow in spaces Transition areas for engaging
users - Supporting Temporal Rhythms in Physical Settings
- Recognizing Spontaneous encounters and 100
locations - Dynamic Social Distances
- situated communication/interruption
- cognitive zones for social engagement
- privacy is not binary, graded levels of privacy
for context
12Part II Computer-mediated Social Awareness -
Design
Part II Computer-mediated Social
AwarenessDesign of Awareness Spaces Role of
PerceptionAudio/Visual Scene Analysis
13Design of Awareness Spaces
- Evolution of Media Spaces
- Informal Communication
- Peripheral Awareness
- Privacy in Context
- Design Exploration Aware Community Portals
14From Hole-in-Space to Place in a Hole
Changing Notions of Media Spaces
- Key Idea Continuous Connections and Creating
Social Spaces - Video Spaces PARC Portland Link, Portholes,
Cruiser, RAVE, ClearBoard, Reflection of Presence
Face Gaze - Audio Spaces Thunderwire and VoiceLoops
Peripheral - Dealing with mediated Face-to-Face Interaction
vs. Audio Spaces - Problems Affordances of Gaze Awareness
Ishii92 - Task Completion doesnt need video, few prefer
audio. Chapnis75 - Co-evolution of Communicative Practices
Dourish96 Ackerman97 - Notions of Space vs. Place Harrison92
15Informal Communication
- Definition Brief, unplanned and frequent - 88
Opportunistic Kraut93 - Co-located researchers more likely to co-publish
- Frequent opportunistic conversations vital in
planning - Problems Portland Link despite 70 drop-ins,
brief encounter less likely to provide extended
interaction vs. face-to-face. - Absence of adequate shared resources, context
culture - Coordinating Remote Interactants
- Lack of Perceived Intrusiveness
- Another view One long intermittent conversation
with multiple unplanned fragments.
Whittaker94 - Regenerating context between intermittent
interactions - Asynchronous co-ordination to achieve co-presence
- Glancing/Eavesdropping to see if recipient busy,
before initiation
16Peripheral Awareness
- Awareness Understanding of the activity of
others, which provides a context for your own
activity. Dourish Bellotti 92 - Social Facilitation People use others visible
activities in framing their own goals,
motivations and actions. Ackerman 95 - Light-weight and Implicit - gathered passively
and does not require response - makes it hard to
evaluate impact. - Extending perceptual reach beyond visual space -
auditory awareness - Coordination - predict interruptability of
recipients Portholes cognition of shared
representations Hutchins 95 - Community - people around, how busy is the space,
context of activity. - State Flow of Events - Cues to work progress
from movement of people Bellotti 96 tempo of
processes in Air-Traffic flight strips Hughes
92 - Synchronous vs. Asynchronous - Cycle of
divergence sync
17Privacy in Context
- Key Factors Level of Privacy Needed depends on
- Social Setting
- Physical Situation
- Perceived Value of Information
- Cost of False Alarm
- Criteria Evaluating Privacy Support in Systems
Bellotti Sellen 93 - Trustworthy
- Learnability
- Reciprocity
- Disembodied Context
- Perceptible and Timely Feedback
- Unobtrusive and Light-weight
- Implicit or Default Control
18Situated Impromptu Interaction Glancing and
Lingering
Aware-Portals
-
-
-
- Capturing a glance
-
-
- Showing a close-up ...
19Social Awareness Capturing Frozen Glances
- Facial Timelines for articles browsed.
- Whats interesting in the news lately?
- Is Geek around today?
- So Walter likes reading about Linux!
20Temporal Awareness Community Activity Rhythms?
Aware-Portals
- Traces of activity on a shared timeline
- Creating a living memory of the workspace
- Noticing periodic, novel and anomalous
patterns
21Privacy Protocols in Aware Portals
- Trustworthy? Hallway-only camera and Social
Trust - No recording or transmission
- Anonymous Face Detection
- But no Explicit Privacy Statement Shown
- Reciprocal Video Mirror
- Goes a long way!
- Perceptible Timely Feedback Gradual Face
Capture Protocol - Learnability? Not obvious for novice user
- Disembodiment from Context? Unintended
association with articles? - No means to disassociate face
22Part II Computer-mediated Social Awareness -
Role of Perception
Part II Computer-mediated Social
AwarenessDesign of Awareness Spaces Role of
PerceptionAudio/Visual Scene Analysis
23Role of Perception for Social Awareness
- Activity Abstraction of Social Activity
- audio/visual cues of sync/async activity - IR,
motion, audio - Context Classify Social/Physical Context
- Location in Auditory Sawhney, Clarkson, Visual
Schiele98 - Identity Detecting Persons Identity
- Face Rec. Rowley, Speaker ID Wilcox, Floor ID
- Salience Detect Salient Audio/Visual Events -gt
Trigger Human - A/V Scene cuts, Affect in Speech Slaney,
biometric signals - Summary Summarize Activity in Temporal Scenes
- Clustering color histograms, speech skimmer
Arons96 - Pattern Recognize Recurring and Anomalous
Patterns - Modeling events motion histograms Davis97,
HMMs Oliver99
24Role of Perception for Social Distance
- Preserving Privacy
- Hiding Activity, Context, Identity, Masking
Content - Shadow-Views Low-disturbance Audio Smith
Hudson 96 - Garble-Phone
- Minimize Interruption
- Scaleable Notification Model Nomadic Radio
- Conversation/Ambient Classification Clarkson98
25Perceptual Scene Analysis Research Directions
- Features - determined for specialized everyday
tasks baby in a crib? - Representations - for Audio/Visual Salience in
Scenes - Event Formation - Fusing A/V data into single
perceptual events - Evidence Integration - combining cues from
multiple modalities prior sources
Bayesian Networks - Summarizing Scenes from Auditory cues - Affect,
background sounds? - Modeling Long-term Context Recognizing
Anomalies - Human-assisted Scene Understanding?