Browsing by Author "Hutchings, Duke"
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- Large High Resolution Displays for Co-Located Collaborative Intelligence AnalysisBradel, Lauren; Andrews, Christopher; Endert, Alex; Koch, Kristen; Vogt, Katherine; Hutchings, Duke; North, Christopher L. (Department of Computer Science, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, 2011-11-01)Large, high-resolution vertical displays carry the potential to increase the accuracy of collaborative sensemaking, given correctly designed visual analytics tools. From an exploratory user study using a fictional intelligence analysis task, we investigated how users interact with the display to construct spatial schemas and externalize information, as well as how they establish shared and private territories. We investigated the spatial strategies of users partitioned by tool type used (document- or entity-centric). We classified the types of territorial behavior exhibited in terms of how the users interacted with the display (integrated or independent workspaces). Next, we examined how territorial behavior impacted the common ground between the pairs of users. Finally, we recommend design guidelines for building co-located collaborative visual analytics tools specifically for use on large, high-resolution vertical displays.
- Space for Two to Think: Large, High-Resolution Displays for Co-located Collaborative SensemakingBradel, Lauren; Andrews, Christopher; Endert, Alex; Vogt, Katherine; Hutchings, Duke; North, Christopher L. (Department of Computer Science, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, 2011-06-01)Large, high-resolution displays carry the potential to enhance single display groupware collaborative sensemaking for intelligence analysis tasks by providing space for common ground to develop, but it is up to the visual analytics tools to utilize this space effectively. In an exploratory study, we compared two tools (Jigsaw and a document viewer), which were adapted to support multiple input devices, to observe how the large display space was used in establishing and maintaining common ground during an intelligence analysis scenario using 50 textual documents. We discuss the spatial strategies employed by the pairs of participants, which were largely dependent on tool type (data-centric or function-centric), as well as how different visual analytics tools used collaboratively on large, high-resolution displays impact common ground in both process and solution. Using these findings, we suggest design considerations to enable future co-located collaborative sensemaking tools to take advantage of the benefits of collaborating on large, high-resolution displays.