Multi-user interface for co-located real-time work with digital mock-up: a way to foster collaboration?

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TitreMulti-user interface for co-located real-time work with digital mock-up: a way to foster collaboration?
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuteursLi B, Lou R, Segonds F, Merienne F
JournalINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERACTIVE DESIGN AND MANUFACTURING - IJIDEM
Volume11
Pagination609-621
Date PublishedAUG
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1955-2513
Mots-cléscollaborative design, Computer-aided design, Computer-human interface, Multi-view
Résumé

Nowadays more and more industrial design activities adopt the strategy of Concurrent Engineering (CE), which changes the way to carry out all the activities along the product's lifecycle from sequential to parallel. Various experts of different activities produce technical data using domain-specific software. To augment the interoperability among the technical data, a Digital Mock-Up (DMU), or a Building Information Model (BIM) in architectural engineering can be used. Through an appropriate Computer-Human Interface (CHI), each expert has his/her own point-of-view (POV) of a specific representation of DMU's technical data according to an involved domain. When multiple experts work collaboratively in the same place and at the same time, the number of CHIs is also multiplied by the number of experts. Instead of multiple CHIs, therefore, a unique CHI should be developed to support the multiview and multi-interaction collaborative works. Our contributions in this paper are (a) a concept of a CHI system with multi-view and multi-interaction of DMU for multiple users in collaborative design; (b) a state of the art of multi-view and multi-interaction metaphors; (c) an experiment to evaluate a collaborative application using multi-view CHI. The experimental results indicate that, in multi-view CHI working condition, users are more efficient than in the other two working conditions (multiple CHIs and split view CHI). Moreover, in multi-view CHI working condition, the user, who is helping the other, takes less mutual awareness of where the other collaborator works than the other two working conditions.

DOI10.1007/s12008-016-0335-2