The structured development of virtual environments: enhancing functionality and interactivity

Desktop Virtual Reality (VR) is an easy and affordable way to implement VR technology within an organisation. It provides an experience that can be shared by many people, and its 3D, interactive capability facilitates the communication of ideas not possible using other media formats. There are a nu...

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Main Author: Eastgate, Richard Mark
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10954/
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author Eastgate, Richard Mark
author_facet Eastgate, Richard Mark
author_sort Eastgate, Richard Mark
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Desktop Virtual Reality (VR) is an easy and affordable way to implement VR technology within an organisation. It provides an experience that can be shared by many people, and its 3D, interactive capability facilitates the communication of ideas not possible using other media formats. There are a number of software toolkits available for the building and programming of Virtual Environments (VEs), but very few resources that can help developers acquire the skills and techniques required to give their VEs utility and usability. This thesis reviews existing research into VE design with an emphasis on interactivity and usability, and then uses a case study based approach to conceptualise the VE development process and develop exemplar guidance tools. The first group of case studies date from the early 1990s, with an emphasis on finding ways to build VEs incorporating functionality. The experience gained through these case studies was used to discover the issues most relevant to the VE developer and report on the techniques used to resolve them. Several models are then presented to explain these techniques and relate them to the VE development context. For the second set of case studies the emphasis moves to finding ways of making VEs more usable. Several approaches are presented and further conceptualisation results in a decision table based guidance tool. The third set of case studies was carried out within the framework provided by the Virtual Environment Development Structure (VEDS), developed jointly by the author and other members of the Virtual Reality Applications Research Team (VIRART) at the University of Nottingham. In the light of this practical application of the framework and the experience gained throughout the case studies, changes are made to the structure to make it more accurately represent the actual process employed by VE developers. This version of VEDS is then used to more effectively define the areas where VE development guidance tools are needed. Using this information, and based on the experience acquired and the techniques developed throughout this research, three exemplar tools are presented.
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spelling nottingham-109542025-02-28T11:10:29Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10954/ The structured development of virtual environments: enhancing functionality and interactivity Eastgate, Richard Mark Desktop Virtual Reality (VR) is an easy and affordable way to implement VR technology within an organisation. It provides an experience that can be shared by many people, and its 3D, interactive capability facilitates the communication of ideas not possible using other media formats. There are a number of software toolkits available for the building and programming of Virtual Environments (VEs), but very few resources that can help developers acquire the skills and techniques required to give their VEs utility and usability. This thesis reviews existing research into VE design with an emphasis on interactivity and usability, and then uses a case study based approach to conceptualise the VE development process and develop exemplar guidance tools. The first group of case studies date from the early 1990s, with an emphasis on finding ways to build VEs incorporating functionality. The experience gained through these case studies was used to discover the issues most relevant to the VE developer and report on the techniques used to resolve them. Several models are then presented to explain these techniques and relate them to the VE development context. For the second set of case studies the emphasis moves to finding ways of making VEs more usable. Several approaches are presented and further conceptualisation results in a decision table based guidance tool. The third set of case studies was carried out within the framework provided by the Virtual Environment Development Structure (VEDS), developed jointly by the author and other members of the Virtual Reality Applications Research Team (VIRART) at the University of Nottingham. In the light of this practical application of the framework and the experience gained throughout the case studies, changes are made to the structure to make it more accurately represent the actual process employed by VE developers. This version of VEDS is then used to more effectively define the areas where VE development guidance tools are needed. Using this information, and based on the experience acquired and the techniques developed throughout this research, three exemplar tools are presented. 2001 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10954/1/368953.pdf Eastgate, Richard Mark (2001) The structured development of virtual environments: enhancing functionality and interactivity. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Desktop Virtual Reality Virtual Environments Virtual Environment Development Structure
spellingShingle Desktop Virtual Reality
Virtual Environments
Virtual Environment Development Structure
Eastgate, Richard Mark
The structured development of virtual environments: enhancing functionality and interactivity
title The structured development of virtual environments: enhancing functionality and interactivity
title_full The structured development of virtual environments: enhancing functionality and interactivity
title_fullStr The structured development of virtual environments: enhancing functionality and interactivity
title_full_unstemmed The structured development of virtual environments: enhancing functionality and interactivity
title_short The structured development of virtual environments: enhancing functionality and interactivity
title_sort structured development of virtual environments: enhancing functionality and interactivity
topic Desktop Virtual Reality
Virtual Environments
Virtual Environment Development Structure
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10954/