A research through design (RTD) approach in the design of a 360-video platform interface

Many video interfaces enable multiple sources of input video in displaying and streaming vital information. Most of these setups can be seen in deployed security systems and observer footage that are usually used for surveillance and crisis monitoring. The motivations of this study includes the use...

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Main Authors: Poblete, Brian Michael, Mendoza, Emir Christopher, De Castro, Julian Paolo, Deja, Jordan Aiko, Nodalo, Giselle
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Published: Animo Repository 2019
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3853
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Institution: De La Salle University
id oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-4343
record_format eprints
spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-43432021-05-18T09:17:13Z A research through design (RTD) approach in the design of a 360-video platform interface Poblete, Brian Michael Mendoza, Emir Christopher De Castro, Julian Paolo Deja, Jordan Aiko Nodalo, Giselle Many video interfaces enable multiple sources of input video in displaying and streaming vital information. Most of these setups can be seen in deployed security systems and observer footage that are usually used for surveillance and crisis monitoring. The motivations of this study includes the use of multiple videos of a single event taken from varying sources in the investigation of a crime. In this study, we consider a crowd-sourced approach to multiple sources of video and aim to design an interface towards multiple possible use-cases. In designing this interface, we performed field studies and on site surveying along with initial user tests to validate our ideas. Research through design was added into the methodology to consider multiple point of views considering varying sources of perspective. Specifically, we catered the design of an initial interface in helping multiple users understand several views from various cameras, angles, and positions. The participants chosen for this study are students who have at least the basic technological ability of using a smartphone and taking a video with it. The results of this study could add to the use cases for 360 videos and video live streams. We intend to extend this study by validating the 360-view and designing an algorithm towards stitching one final view crowd-sourced from multiple cameras and streamers. © 2019 Association for Computing Machinery 2019-04-01T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3853 info:doi/10.1145/3328243.3328265 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Camcorders Human-computer interaction User-centered system design Human computation Computer Sciences Software Engineering
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Camcorders
Human-computer interaction
User-centered system design
Human computation
Computer Sciences
Software Engineering
spellingShingle Camcorders
Human-computer interaction
User-centered system design
Human computation
Computer Sciences
Software Engineering
Poblete, Brian Michael
Mendoza, Emir Christopher
De Castro, Julian Paolo
Deja, Jordan Aiko
Nodalo, Giselle
A research through design (RTD) approach in the design of a 360-video platform interface
description Many video interfaces enable multiple sources of input video in displaying and streaming vital information. Most of these setups can be seen in deployed security systems and observer footage that are usually used for surveillance and crisis monitoring. The motivations of this study includes the use of multiple videos of a single event taken from varying sources in the investigation of a crime. In this study, we consider a crowd-sourced approach to multiple sources of video and aim to design an interface towards multiple possible use-cases. In designing this interface, we performed field studies and on site surveying along with initial user tests to validate our ideas. Research through design was added into the methodology to consider multiple point of views considering varying sources of perspective. Specifically, we catered the design of an initial interface in helping multiple users understand several views from various cameras, angles, and positions. The participants chosen for this study are students who have at least the basic technological ability of using a smartphone and taking a video with it. The results of this study could add to the use cases for 360 videos and video live streams. We intend to extend this study by validating the 360-view and designing an algorithm towards stitching one final view crowd-sourced from multiple cameras and streamers. © 2019 Association for Computing Machinery
format text
author Poblete, Brian Michael
Mendoza, Emir Christopher
De Castro, Julian Paolo
Deja, Jordan Aiko
Nodalo, Giselle
author_facet Poblete, Brian Michael
Mendoza, Emir Christopher
De Castro, Julian Paolo
Deja, Jordan Aiko
Nodalo, Giselle
author_sort Poblete, Brian Michael
title A research through design (RTD) approach in the design of a 360-video platform interface
title_short A research through design (RTD) approach in the design of a 360-video platform interface
title_full A research through design (RTD) approach in the design of a 360-video platform interface
title_fullStr A research through design (RTD) approach in the design of a 360-video platform interface
title_full_unstemmed A research through design (RTD) approach in the design of a 360-video platform interface
title_sort research through design (rtd) approach in the design of a 360-video platform interface
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2019
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3853
_version_ 1767195882602627072