A virtual cocktail party
Author(s) -
Bill Rogers,
Masood Masoodian,
Mark Apperley
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
research commons (the university of waikato)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/3206505.3206569
Subject(s) - conversation , computer science , entertainment , tourism , work (physics) , multimedia , human–computer interaction , world wide web , graphics , collaborative software , internet privacy , psychology , engineering , communication , political science , mechanical engineering , computer graphics (images) , law
Whilst the primary purpose of conferences is work --- formal exchange and sharing of information --- they almost always also include elements of play: informal social and entertainment elements, such as receptions, dinners, and tourism activities. These activities also provide the opportunity for 'serious' discussions, meeting people, and networking, and are an essential part of a good conference. Despite this, most virtual conferencing tools fail to provide support for such activities, instead focusing on austere goals related to saving money, time, and travel. This paper describes the concept of a Virtual Cocktail Party (VCP) tool to integrate into a virtual conference environment. In VCP the 'party' is presented as a mixture of individuals and small conversation groups 'circulating' at the virtual venue. Exploiting an automated speech-to-text system, words from conversations are shown in word-clouds displayed around conversation groups, sufficient to identify topics of conversation allowing participants to decide whether or not to join a group.
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