| Authors: |
R. Sharma
and M. Yeasin
and N. Krahnstoever
and I. Rauschert
and G. Cai
and I. Brewer
and A. M. MacEachren
and K. Sengupta
|
| URL: |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/JPROC.2003.817145 |
| Tags: |
3d
ai
crisis
graphics
ieee
information
interface
language
management
multimodal
paper
processing
spatial
v0805
|
| Abstract: |
Emergency response requires strategic assessment of risks, decisions,
and communications that are time critical while requiring teams of
individuals to have fast access to large volumes of complex information
and technologies that enable tightly coordinated work. The access
to this information by crisis management teams in emergency operations
centers can be facilitated through various human-computer interfaces.
Unfortunately, these interfaces are hard to use, require extensive
training, and often impede rather than support teamwork. Dialogue-enabled
devices, based on natural, multimodal interfaces, have the potential
of making a variety of information technology tools accessible during
crisis management. This paper establishes the importance of multimodal
interfaces in various aspects of crisis management and explores many
issues in realizing successful speech-gesture driven, dialogue-enabled
interfaces for crisis management. This paper is organized in five
parts. The first part discusses the needs of crisis management that
can be potentially met by the development of appropriate interfaces.
The second part discusses the issues related to the design and development
of multimodal interfaces in the context of crisis management. The
third part discusses the state of the art in both the theories and
practices involving these human-computer interfaces. In particular,
it describes the evolution and implementation details of two representative
systems, Crisis Management (XISM) and Dialog Assisted Visual Environment
for Geoinformation (DAVE/spl I.bar/G). The fourth part speculates
on the short-term and long-term research directions that will help
addressing the outstanding challenges in interfaces that support
dialogue and collaboration. Finally, the fifth part concludes the
paper. |
@article{SharmaYeasinEtAl03IEEEproc,
title = {Speech-Gesture Driven Multimodal Interfaces for Crisis Management},
author = {R. Sharma and M. Yeasin and N. Krahnstoever and I. Rauschert and G. Cai and I. Brewer and A. M. MacEachren and K. Sengupta},
journal = {Proceedings of the IEEE},
number = {9},
pages = {1327-1354},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/JPROC.2003.817145},
volume = {91},
year = {2003},
abstract = {Emergency response requires strategic assessment of risks, decisions,
and communications that are time critical while requiring teams of
individuals to have fast access to large volumes of complex information
and technologies that enable tightly coordinated work. The access
to this information by crisis management teams in emergency operations
centers can be facilitated through various human-computer interfaces.
Unfortunately, these interfaces are hard to use, require extensive
training, and often impede rather than support teamwork. Dialogue-enabled
devices, based on natural, multimodal interfaces, have the potential
of making a variety of information technology tools accessible during
crisis management. This paper establishes the importance of multimodal
interfaces in various aspects of crisis management and explores many
issues in realizing successful speech-gesture driven, dialogue-enabled
interfaces for crisis management. This paper is organized in five
parts. The first part discusses the needs of crisis management that
can be potentially met by the development of appropriate interfaces.
The second part discusses the issues related to the design and development
of multimodal interfaces in the context of crisis management. The
third part discusses the state of the art in both the theories and
practices involving these human-computer interfaces. In particular,
it describes the evolution and implementation details of two representative
systems, Crisis Management (XISM) and Dialog Assisted Visual Environment
for Geoinformation (DAVE/spl I.bar/G). The fourth part speculates
on the short-term and long-term research directions that will help
addressing the outstanding challenges in interfaces that support
dialogue and collaboration. Finally, the fifth part concludes the
paper.},
issn = {0018-9219}, timestamp = {2008.02.04}, owner = {flint},
keywords = {3d ai crisis graphics ieee information interface language management multimodal paper processing spatial v0805 }
}