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Collaboration and Education Group

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collaboration. MOSTLY DOMAIN INDEPENDENT. Both aspects are important and complementary ... shared notes for asynchronous collaboration ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Collaboration and Education Group


1
Collaboration and Education Group
  • Jonathan Grudin
  • Microsoft Research
  • jgrudin_at_microsoft.com

2
Collaboration and Education Group
  • Formed about 12 months ago
  • Mission
  • To explore novel technologies and applications
    that enhance collaboration and education /
    training
  • Current work focuses on streaming media
  • Research model
  • Evaluation Laboratory and Field Studies

3
Technology and Education
  • Two broad facets
  • Technology for improved content
  • deep models of subject matter and student
  • active exploration of subject (simulations)
  • relate to students context/environment (situated
    learning)
  • MOSTLY DOMAIN DEPENDENT
  • Technology infrastructure for
  • course and student management
  • content creation
  • delivery / distribution
  • collaboration
  • MOSTLY DOMAIN INDEPENDENT
  • Both aspects are important and complementary

4
Technology Adoption Phases
  • Phase-1
  • digital version of non-digital process
  • Phase-2
  • value-added features appear in digital version
  • Phase-3
  • process and technology re-design

5
Why Consider Multimedia?
  • Network, processor, memory capability changing
    quickly
  • Reasoning about exponential growth
  • Simultaneous emergence of live and on-demand
    capability
  • Shift in the definition of scholarship

6
Ongoing Projects
  • MSTE and MURL Online Seminars
  • Time Compression, Skimming, Indexing, Browsing
  • MRAS Multimedia Annotations and Authoring
  • Flatland Telepresentations

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MSTE Presentations
  • Logs of 10,000 sessions by over 2000 users
  • Some results
  • On-demand audience about 40 of live audience
  • 60 lt 5 minutes
  • Viewers jump around video
  • Initial portions much more likely to be watched
  • Presentations will be designed differently in
    future
  • Present key messages early in talk
  • Present key messages early in slide
  • Use meaningful slide titles
  • Reveal talk structure in slide titles
  • Consider post-processing talk for on-line viewers

10
Analysis of Online Presentation Viewing
  • Logs of 10,000 sessions by over 2000 users
  • Some results
  • On-demand audience about 40 of live audience
  • 60 lt 5 minutes
  • Viewers jump around video
  • Initial portions much more likely to be watched
  • Presentations will be designed differently in
    future
  • Present key messages early in talk
  • Present key messages early in slide
  • Use meaningful slide titles
  • Reveal talk structure in slide titles
  • Consider post-processing talk for on-line viewers

11
Ongoing Projects
  • MSTE and MURL Online Seminars
  • Time Compression, Skimming, Indexing, Browsing
  • MRAS Multimedia Annotations and Authoring
  • Flatland Telepresentations

12
Time Compression, Skimming, Indexing
  • While text documents are easy to skim, that is
    not true for audio-video
  • Ability to skim can be a key advantage of
    web-video
  • time-compression up to 2-fold nothing thrown
    away
  • skimming gt 2-fold some content thrown away
  • indexing adding navigable structure
  • Also useful in live broadcast scenarios
  • e.g., late joiners can catch up to live talk

13
Time Compression Synchronized Audio and Video
  • To preserve pitch throw away portion of each
    100ms chunk, then stitch together
  • Basic signal processing well known, but several
    systems issues
  • Results of lab studies
  • People choose 1.4 speed, dont adjust much
  • They like it
  • I think it will become a necessity Once people
    have experienced it they will never want to go
    back. Makes viewing long videos much, much
    easier.
  • Comprehension may go up

14
Time-Compression Demo
15
Skimming Compression Goes Nonlinear
  • To beat 2x speedup, must throw away content
  • Sources of information
  • audio pauses, intonation, speech-to-text and NLP
  • video scene changes
  • other slide-changes, previous viewers patterns
  • Lab studies of 4x-5x speedup
  • Viewers learn from automatic summaries
  • Viewers like and learn more when author-edited
  • Perception of quality increases over time
  • Mixed-initiative summarization is promising

16
Indexing
  • Vanilla video provides no structure for
    navigation
  • Indexing provides navigable structure examples
  • textual table of contents (slide titles)
  • video shots / scenes
  • speech-to-text gt NLP gt topic detection

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Ongoing Projects
  • MSTE and MURL Online Seminars
  • Time Compression, Skimming, Indexing, Browsing
  • MRAS Multimedia Annotations and Authoring
  • Flatland Telepresentations

21
Multimedia / Temporal Annotations
  • Motivating scenarios
  • a virtual university
  • all students are remote, asynchronously watching
    lecture videos
  • a standard university
  • making better use of in-class time
  • Temporal annotations
  • annotations associated with streaming media
  • each annotation is linked to the media time-line
  • annotations stored separately from the media files

22
  • Ability to annotate can add significant value
  • shared notes for asynchronous collaboration
  • question-answers linked to a streaming-video
    lecture
  • archived feedback for the instructor
  • personal notes on audio-video found on the web
  • personal/shared table of contents summarizations
  • annotations may be computer generated
  • use speech-to-text providing search and seek
    ability
  • captured strokes from electronic white-board
  • captured questions, slide-flips, from live
    broadcast
  • ...

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Results from Preliminary User Studies
  • Personal note-taking study (MRAS vs. Paper)
  • similar of notes (1 / minute)
  • positioning none in paper 10-15s later in MRAS
  • all subjects preferred MRAS (although more time),
    and thought more useful for future reference
  • Shared notes study
  • text preferred to audio
  • 14/18 stated more participation than in live
    session
  • auto-tracking particularly useful

27
Currrent Work
  • MSTE class to use MRAS and recorded lectures
  • Can we increase instructor productivity?
  • Can we emulate live-classroom discussion /
    community formation in an asynchronous
    environment using MRAS?

28
Ongoing Projects
  • MSTE and MURL Online Seminars
  • Time Compression, Skimming, Indexing, Browsing
  • MRAS Multimedia Annotations and Authoring
  • Flatland Telepresentations

29
Flatland Tele-presentation System
  • Joint project with the Virtual Worlds Group
  • Flexible architecture for distributed
    collaborative applications
  • Target scenarios
  • presentations to remote audience
  • online conferences
  • distributed tutored-video-instruction
  • ...

30
The Flatland Project
31
Do We Need to Sacrifice Quality?
  • The goal is to improve it
  • Stanford Tutored Video Instruction (TVI)
  • Process
  • video tapes of un-rehearsed live lectures
  • small group of students watch along with a
    para-professional tutor
  • Results from 1978-86
  • All MSEE 1800 students, avg. GPA 3.40
  • TVI-MSEE 89 students, avg. GPA 3.62
  • Similar observations recently for D-TVI version

32
Stanford TVI Experiments 10/73 - 3/74
  • remote TVI students with tutor do best
  • it helped at-risk students even more
  • Source J.F. Gibbons, et al. Science, Vol. 195,
    No. 4283, 18 March 1977

33
Flatland Experiences
  • Initial use in 3 multi-session MSTE classes
  • Presentations from desktop to remote audience
  • Students
  • Liked the convenience
  • Liked ability to multitask
  • Did not think learning suffered
  • Instructors
  • Missed familiar sources of feedback
  • Comfort level rose over time for 2 of 3
  • Overall Lack of awareness of others a key
    problem

34
Issues Being Explored
  • Creating presence and awareness
  • representing attendees gaze activity level ...
  • Providing for interactivity protocols for online
    talks
  • types of widgets floor control multiple back
    channels
  • Complexity of interface for speaker / audience
  • use of channels over time different physical
    contexts
  • Capture and replay of tele-presentations
  • capture all activity time-compression
    annotations

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Activity Surrounding Teaching/Learning
  • Pre-authoring
  • Slides, web notes, reference material, exercises,
  • Content delivery
  • Synchronous delivery to local/remote audience
  • Archived for on-demand audience and review
  • On-demand access by students
  • Watch content personal notes TOC index
  • Discussion around content
  • Synchronous small group one-on-one
  • Asynchronous
  • Post-lecture work by instructor / tutor
  • Answer questions discussions feedback
    redesign
  • Student evaluation

40
Concluding Remarks
  • Key drivers of change
  • market needs
  • technology
  • Key new directions
  • learner-centric
  • asynchronous small-group synchronous
  • Key challenges
  • concrete studies to indicate effectiveness
  • technology/products taking value beyond cost
  • business model and bootstrapping issues

41
For More Information
  • http//www.research.microsoft.com

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Watching Behavior Within a Session
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