@inproceedings{Sigitov2016, author = {Anton Sigitov}, title = {Effects of Workspace Awareness and Territoriality in Environments with Large, Shared Displays}, series = {Hancock, Marquardt et al. (Eds.): Proceedings of the 2016 ACM Companion on Interactive Surfaces and Spaces (ISS '16). Niagara Falls, ON, Canada, November 06-09, 2016}, publisher = {ACM Press}, isbn = {978-1-4503-4530-9}, doi = {10.1145/3009939.3009940}, pages = {1 -- 6}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Synchronous cooperative work of multiple collaborators in large, high-resolution display systems comprises such psychological phenomena like workspace awareness and human territoriality. The phenomena and interplay between them can cause a significant impact on human-human and human-environment interaction. In a non-digital environment humans rely on their own physical abilities, utilities, and social protocols to control those phenomena (e.g. close eyes, or use earplugs to reduce workspace awareness; rotate oneself towards collaborators to increase workspace awareness). Digital environments, on the other hand, provide us with a possibility to ease, automate, and unify control processes, thus taking off that burden from users. Yet, we have to understand first, what effects workspace awareness and territoriality have within a collaborative environment. The aim of this doctoral thesis is to investigate effects of workspace awareness and territoriality on users and interaction processes in mixed-focus scenarios of various collaborative settings.}, language = {en} }