Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2009
DOI: 10.1145/1518701.1519000
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Familial collaborations in a museum

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Cited by 32 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Encouraging these types of interaction by means of technology can also be part of The Collaborative Work of Heritage: Open Challenges for CSCW broader cultural and social policy relating to heritage, as it happens for example in Japan where family visits to museums are seen as ways to build cultural capital and technology support to them is encouraged (Hope et al, 2009).…”
Section: Heritage Technologies In Usementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Encouraging these types of interaction by means of technology can also be part of The Collaborative Work of Heritage: Open Challenges for CSCW broader cultural and social policy relating to heritage, as it happens for example in Japan where family visits to museums are seen as ways to build cultural capital and technology support to them is encouraged (Hope et al, 2009).…”
Section: Heritage Technologies In Usementioning
confidence: 99%
“…main finding is that physical design main finding is that physical design affects group experience in terms of accommodation and access affects group experience in terms of accommodation and access points and therefore in terms of social interaction points and therefore in terms of social interaction interactions with the "Jurascopes" at the Berlin Museum of Natural History interactions with the "Jurascopes" at the Berlin Museum of Natural History like devices overlaying digital 3D animations over reallike devices overlaying digital 3D animations over realskeletons and linked to a related multi-touch screen console), Hornecker observed skeletons and linked to a related multi-touch screen console), Hornecker observed how the physical accommodation of hands how the physical accommodation of hands individual is linked significantly to d individual is linked significantly to d interactions, and there is a balance struck between the occurrence of cooperative and there is a balance struck between the occurrence of cooperative interactions vs. lone ones, and trade offs of collaboration versus individual use interactions vs. lone ones, (Hornecker, 2010). Conversely, in studies of multi- (Hornecker, 2010 (Hope et al, 2009).…”
Section: Heritage Technologies In Usementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their communication capabilities, including high-bandwidth internet connections, enable the development of complex networked applications. Moreover, mobile phones are personal devices that users carry with them most of the time and are, therefore, specially suited for Virtual Heritage in supporting moving users with interactive multimedia information: users can receive audio explanations, complementary videos and images, text information, 3D graphics and, on the other side, users' activities can be mapped into and interact with a 3D virtual environment (Sauer & Göbel, 2003, Farella et al, 2005, Santangelo et al 2006, Prasolova-Førland et al, 2007, Hope et al, 2009. Concerning content creation and handling, until the last decade, the few available authoring and management tools were professional and often expensive software, hampering their diffusion and use by everyday users.…”
Section: Affordable Virtual Heritage Solutions: the Enabling Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%