Authors
Brid O'Conaill, Steve Whittaker, Sylvia Wilbur
Publication date
1993/12/1
Journal
Human-computer interaction
Volume
8
Issue
4
Pages
389-428
Publisher
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
Description
Recent trends toward telecommuting, mobile work, and wider distribution of the work force, combined with reduced technology costs, have made video communications more attractive as a means of supporting informal remote interaction. In the past, however, video communications have never gained widespread acceptance. Here we identify possible reasons for this by examining how the spoken characteristics of video-mediated communication differ from face-to-face interaction, for a series of real meetings. We evaluate two wide-area systems. One uses readily available Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) lines but suffers the limitations of transmission lags, a half-duplex line, and poor quality video. The other uses optical transmission and video-switching technology with negligible delays, full duplex audio, and broadcast quality video. To analyze the effects of video systems on conversation, we begin with …
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