scholarly journals Acting Rehearsal in Collaborative Multimodal Mixed Reality Environments

2012 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 406-422 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Steptoe ◽  
Jean-Marie Normand ◽  
Oyewole Oyekoya ◽  
Fabrizio Pece ◽  
Elias Giannopoulos ◽  
...  

This paper presents the use of our multimodal mixed reality telecommunication system to support remote acting rehearsal. The rehearsals involved two actors, located in London and Barcelona, and a director in another location in London. This triadic audiovisual telecommunication was performed in a spatial and multimodal collaborative mixed reality environment based on the “destination-visitor” paradigm, which we define and put into use. We detail our heterogeneous system architecture, which spans the three distributed and technologically asymmetric sites, and features a range of capture, display, and transmission technologies. The actors' and director's experience of rehearsing a scene via the system are then discussed, exploring successes and failures of this heterogeneous form of telecollaboration. Overall, the common spatial frame of reference presented by the system to all parties was highly conducive to theatrical acting and directing, allowing blocking, gross gesture, and unambiguous instruction to be issued. The relative inexpressivity of the actors' embodiments was identified as the central limitation of the telecommunication, meaning that moments relying on performing and reacting to consequential facial expression and subtle gesture were less successful.

Author(s):  
Joseph Larmor

AbstractThe two letters now communicated are from G. G. Stokes to W. Thomson, of dates Dec. 12–13, 1848, three years after Faraday's great magneto-optic discovery. They formulated already the permissible types for general equations of propagation, virtually on the basis of the very modern criterion of covariance,—relative to all changes of the spatial frame of reference in the case of active fluids, but having regard to the fixed direction of the extraneous magnetic field in the Faraday case. Their form was elucidated in each case by correlation with a remarkable and significant type of rotational stress in a propagating medium.


1975 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
David L. Groves ◽  
Harvey Kahalas ◽  
David L. Erickson

With the increased amount of leisure time and ways to spend it caused by increased automation throughout the society, most individuals must facilitate utilization of their time to satisfy individual needs for proper maintenance of mental health. Therefore, the personality and social psychology of the individual within this setting must be examined critically. Research on this subject has been primarily of a descriptive nature, especially with regard to motivation. Therefore, this study was undertaken to lay a more quantitative framework for future research. A unique feature of this study was that it examined leisure from a multi-frame of reference, so that the changes in motivation and its important formative variables can be isolated with regard to content area and utilized to help individuals clarify their position to satisfy individual needs. The results indicate that emotion and involvement are the common elements that are related to leisure needs, and that the relationships among the interacting elements change as the frame of reference shifts.


2012 ◽  
Vol 263-266 ◽  
pp. 1745-1749
Author(s):  
Liang Xiang ◽  
Yang Hua ◽  
Jia Si Wang ◽  
Zhong Wei Chen ◽  
Song Yang Du

This paper is to study the common architecture of the software development and compare the software system architecture-selection criteria. Meanwhile, this paper offers appropriate software architecture solution according to the features of data information management of the software testing organization.


1996 ◽  
Vol 22 ◽  
pp. 219-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dominique Schnapper

The political and scientific debate surrounding the concepts of nation, ethnicity, and nationalism is so deeply loaded with values and passions that it should be the sociologist's highest priority to define those terms as precisely as possible in order to distinguish a new debate from the common discourse and to subject the definitions to scrutiny. It is often acknowledged that a clarification of the terms used in the debates of ethnicity, the State, the nation and nationalism is necessary, but such work is rarely done. It is important to make a distinction between the term ‘nation’ and other terms with which it is often confused — and differently in the different nations — and to clear up the ambiguities that affect the political, ideological, and scientific discourse. In the common discourse and even in the scientific literature, such terms as ‘ethnic’ and ‘national’ are often used indifferently, and the ‘nation’ is subject to contradictory criticisms as it is sometimes understood as referring to the ‘nation’ and sometimes to the ‘ethnic group.’ There is always a connection between the concepts used by a given author and that author's theoretical frame of reference.


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