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Oakley, Ian
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Expanding the Design Space of Computer Vision-based Interactive Systems for Group Dance Practice

Author(s)
Lee, SoohwanHwang, SeoyeongOakley, IanLee, Kyungho
Issued Date
2024-07-01
DOI
10.1145/3643834.3661568
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/83588
Fulltext
https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3643834.3661568
Citation
2024 ACM Designing Interactive Systems Conference, DIS 2024, pp.2768 - 2787
Abstract
Group dance, a sub-genre characterized by intricate motions made by a cohort of performers in tight synchronization, has a longstanding and culturally signifcant history and, in modern forms such as cheerleading, a broad base of current adherents. However, despite its popularity, learning group dance routines remains challenging. Based on the prior success of interactive systems to support individual dance learning, this paper argues that group dance settings are fertile ground for augmentation by interactive aids. To better understand these design opportunities, this paper presents a sequence of user-centered studies of and with amateur cheerleading troupes, spanning from the formative (interviews, observations) through the generative (an ideation workshop) to concept validation (technology probes and speed dating). The outcomes are a nuanced understanding of the lived practice of group dance learning, a set of interactive concepts to support those practices, and design directions derived from validating the proposed concepts. Through this empirical work, we expand the design space of interactive dance practice systems from the established context of single-user practice (primarily focused on gesture recognition) to a multi-user, group-based scenario focused on feedback and communication.
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery, Inc

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