User talk:Tirumalavan
Sandbox for the Article on Blended Spaces:
This user talk page or section is in a state of significant expansion or restructuring. You are welcome to assist in its construction by editing it as well. If this user talk page has not been edited in several days, please remove this template. If you are the editor who added this template and you are actively editing, please be sure to replace this template with {{in use}} during the active editing session. Click on the link for template parameters to use.
This page was last edited by Tirumalavan (talk | contribs) 9 years ago. (Update timer) |
A Blended space is an area in which the physical environment and virtual environment are oriented in such a way that together they create a experience of being in an entirely new environment.[1][3] While in a blended space a person's cultural and cognitive models subconsciously obscure the borders between the physical and digital spaces to create a feeling, called presence[1], of a unified space.[4] The interaction between the person and the space, and the related feedback, are what creates the sense of presence and separates the blended space from Mixed Reality.[1]
History
Fauconnier and Turner : Blending Theory: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conceptual_blending
Check 1.4.4 from book [1].
Describing Spaces
1) Ontology 2) Topology 3) Volatility 4) Media 5) Agents
Structure of a Blended Space
1) Generic Space 2) Physical and Information space 3) Correspondences between Physical and Information Space 4) Blended Space
Blended space is parallel to Mixed Reality.
Notification system. Tangible presence. [book] Physical input --> information output
Applications
Genesee County Village & Museum, Mobile Interactions.
Jupiter Artland Project - Oli Mival
See Also
References
[1][2] [2] http://hci.uni-konstanz.de/dcis/downloads/DCIS2012_Slides_Benyon.pdf [3] http://dl.acm.org.ezproxy.rit.edu/citation.cfm?id=1959025 [4] p398
- ^ Benyon, David (2014). Spaces of Interaction, Places for Experience (1 ed.). Morgan and Claypool. p. 97. ISBN 9781608457724.
- ^ Benyon, David (2014). Spaces of Interaction, Places for Experience (1 ed.). Morgan and Claypool. p. 97. ISBN 9781608457724.