Title: Do
1Dos and Donts of using Videoconferencing for
Remote Teaching A Human Factors Approach
- Milton Chen, PhD
- Human Computer Interaction Lab
- Stanford University
- Presented at the 21st NORDUnet Network Conference
8/27/2003
2Executive Summary
- Dont use video if the task doesnt need it
- Dont use non-fluent video
- Dont make call setup difficult
- Dont use voice activated switching
- Dont sacrifice audio
- Do show self view
- Do show audience
3Distance education at Stanford
a 2003 operator console
a 1969 classroom
a 2003 lecture viewer
- 6000 students, 20 M in tuition each year
- Can hear but not see the remote students
4Consequence of not seeing the students
- Little interaction with remote students
- Local students asked 3 questions per session
- Remote students asked 1 question in 6 month
-
- based on classroom observation of 4 CS
classes
5F2F interaction is crucial for discussions
120 students, 15 TAs, and 41 faculty
Report to the School of Engineering Deans
Office 01
6Distance learning
The vision any where, any time
The reality any where, any time except live
7The Stanford Video Auditorium
15 x 5 video wall
desktop interface
8The Stanford Video Auditorium
9Accomplishments
- Intel President Paul Otellini demonstrated vsee
during his keynote at IDF - Candidate system for International Space Station
- With Bob Bradford, MSFC
- Featured Internet2 project to break video wall
record - Attempt to see all 200 members of Internet2
simultaneously
10Videoconferencing Solutions
Max video links Max video resolution Bandwidth at 352x288 15fps
Microsoft NetMeeting, Yahoo Super Webcam 1 352x288 200 Kbps
Polycom, Tandberg, 4 352x288 200 Kbps
vsee 16 720x480 100 Kbps
At 30 fps on a 3 GHz Pentium 4
11Instructors view
Students view
Independent Students
Stanford
Iceland
12The great expectation
expectation
19271st demo by ATT
1964 PicturePhone
1991/92Mbone VIC CUseeMe
1996 NetMeeting
131st Revolution Possible
2nd Revolution Ubiquitous
first mobile phone, 1924
first handheld phone, 1973
first videophone, 1927
14We express ourselves into existence. -
Iris Murdoch
Tyranny of real classrooms vsee A history of
failures Harmful effect of video
15Harmful effect of video
- Time and resource sink
- Make user look bad
- Gaze less potent gt are you ignoring me?
- Gesture less potent gt am I not interesting?
- Slow response gt user is slow?
- Lack of lip sync gt user is not believable?
- Lack of eye contact gt user is not motivated?
Reeves and Nass 96
16Eye contact stirs us to action
Sharbat Gula, photographed by McCurry 83
17Eye contact fires up our brain
Kampe et al. 01 Nature
18Methodology
Large display with camera at the center
Observers watch videos of looker
19Eye contact?
20Sensitivity is asymmetric
16 observers judged recorded videos of 1 looker
21An anatomical explanation
looking at you
looking sideways
looking up
Illustrations from The Artists Guide to Facial
Expression Faigin 90
eye closing
looking down
22We shape our tools, and there after our tools
shape us - Marshal McLuhan
Tyranny of real classrooms vsee A history of
failures Harmful effect of video Eye contact
finding Lip sync finding
23Why read lips
- Improves comprehension
- Background noise Sumby and Pollack 54
- Hearing loss Binnie, Montgomery, Jackson 86
Yarbus 67
24Audio ahead of the video
- Videoconferencing
- 1 msec to encode 30-msec audio with TrueSpeech
- Up to 250 msec to encode a 720x480 frame with
high-quality MPEG-4 - Detectable skew
- 130 msec Dixon and Spitz 80
- 80 msec Steinmetz 96
25Conventional lip synchronization
26Attribute delay and skew to remote person
- gt person is slow?
- gt person is not believable?
- Reeves and Nass 96
27A new lip sync method
a
v
a
v
sync
decode
network
encode
synchronized and low perceived latency
28Methodology
- Recorded 3 speakers
- 44.1KHz x 16 bps uncompressed audio
- 320x240x30fps uncompressed video
- Sentences consist of easy to lipread words
Speaker 1 female native speaker
Speaker 2 male native speaker
Speaker 3 male non-native speaker
29Perception of variable AV skew
16 subjects judged recorded videos of 1 speaker
30The heart is stirred more slowly by the ear
than by the eye. Horace
Tyranny of real classrooms vsee A history of
failures Harmful effect of video Eye contact
finding Lip sync finding Dos and Don'ts
311. Dont use video if you dont need it
32Benefit of video medium
- Facilitate communication process
- Stimulate interactivity when group is medium size
- Support tasks that require complex collaboration
- Negative feedback
- Negotiation
- Build relationship
- Establish identity
- Build trust
- Form friendship
332. Dont use non-fluent video
34A language fluency model for videoconferencing
- Are you fluent in videoconferencing ?
- Factors that make gaining fluency difficult
- Disruption
- Audio quality lt 8KHz x 8 bits per sample
- Video quality lt 320 x 240 x 10 fps
- Loss of control
- Voice-activated switching
- Room-to-room
- Expressiveness
- No lip sync
- No eye contact
353. Dont make call setup difficult
36Videoconferencing today?
Ericssons mobile phone, 1901
374. Dont use voice activated switching
383 sins
- Activate peripheral vision
- Out of sight out of mind
- Artificial social hierarchy
395. Dont sacrifice audio
40Less tolerant of audio artifacts
- Push button to talk
- Half-duplex
- Latency
- Network loss
416. Do show self view
42Mental model discrepancy
- We think face-to-face
- We see through a tube
437. Do show audience
44Convey vs. feedback
- Where do you actually look?
- The typically class layout
45Dos and Donts
- Dont use video if the task doesnt need it
- Dont use non-fluent video
- Dont make call setup difficult
- Dont use voice activated switching
- Dont sacrifice audio
- Do show self view
- Do show audience
46What is a videophone
A plane that does not fly is not a plane
First flight, Wrights 1903
A videophone that limits communication is not a
videophone
47Summary
- Tyranny of real classrooms
- Case study not seeing gt no participation
- VSee
- A history of failures
- Poor video can be worse than no video
- Findings on eye contact and lip sync
- Dos and Donts
48- Acknowledgement
- Prof. Ebba Hvannberg
- Prof. Pat Hanrahan and Terry Winograd
- Prof. Cliff Nass, Tom Moran, Anoop Gupta
- I would love to hear from you!
- http//vsee.stanford.edu
- Collaborate on the Internet2 demo?