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Telepresence

Telepresence refers to a set of technologies which allow a person to feel as if they were present, to give the appearance or effect of being present via telerobotics, at a place other than their true location.

Telepresence requires that the users' senses interact with specific stimuli in order to provide the feeling of being in that other location. Additionally, users may be given the ability to affect the remote location. In this case, the user's position, movements, actions, voice, etc. may be sensed to transmit and duplicate in the remote location to bring about this effect. Therefore information may be traveling in both directions between the user and the remote location.

A popular application is found in telepresence videoconferencing, the highest possible level of videotelephony. Telepresence via video deploys greater technical sophistication and improved fidelity of both sight and sound than in traditional videoconferencing. Technical advancements in mobile collaboration have also extended the capabilities of videoconferencing beyond the boardroom for use with hand-held mobile devices, enabling collaboration independent of location.

A similar or identical concept is telexistence, which was first proposed by Susumu Tachi in Japan in 1980[1] and 1981[2] as patents and the first report was published in Japanese in 1982[3] and in English in 1984.[4]

History Edit

In a pioneering paper, the U.S. cognitive scientist Marvin Minsky attributed the development of the idea of telepresence to science fiction author Robert A. Heinlein: "My first vision of a remote-controlled economy came from Robert A. Heinlein's prophetic 1948 novel, Waldo," wrote Minsky.[5] In his science fiction short story "Waldo" (1942), Heinlein first proposed a primitive telepresence master-slave manipulator system.

The Brother Assassin, written by Fred Saberhagen in 1969, introduced the complete concept for a telepresence master-slave humanoid system. In the novel, the concept is described as follows: "And a moment later it seemed to all his senses that he had been transported from the master down into the body of the slave-unit standing beneath it on the floor. As the control of its movements passed over to him, the slave started gradually to lean to one side, and he moved its foot to maintain balance as naturally as he moved his own. Tilting back his head, he could look up through the slave's eyes to see the master-unit, with himself inside, maintaining the same attitude on its complex suspension."

 
Early system for immersive telepresence (USAF, 1992 - Virtual Fixtures)

The term telepresence, a neologism due to the futurist Patrick Gunkel, was introduced to the public in a 1980 article by Minsky, who outlined his vision for an adapted version of the older concept of teleoperation that focused on giving a remote participant a feeling of actually being present at a different location.[5] One of the first systems to create a fully immersive illusion of presence in a remote location was the Virtual Fixtures platform developed in 1992 at the U.S. Air Force's Armstrong Labs by inventor Louis Rosenberg. The system included stereoscopic image display from the remote environment as well as immersive touch feedback using a full upper-body exoskeleton.[6][7][8]

The first commercially successful telepresence company, Teleport (which was later renamed TeleSuite), was founded in 1993 by David Allen and Herold Williams.[9] Before TeleSuite, they ran a resort business from which the original concept emerged because they often found businesspeople would have to cut their stays short to participate in important meetings. Their idea was to develop a technology that would allow businesspeople to attend their meetings without leaving the resorts so that they could lengthen their hotel stays.

 
A Tandberg E20 high resolution videoconferencing phone meant to replace conventional desktop phones

Hilton Hotels had originally licensed to install them in their hotels throughout the United States and other countries, but use was low. The idea lost momentum, with Hilton eventually backing out. TeleSuite later began to focus less on the hospitality industry and more on business-oriented telepresence systems. Shareholders eventually held enough stock to replace the company's original leadership, which ultimately led to its collapse.[citation needed] David Allen purchased all of the assets of TeleSuite and appointed Scott Allen as president[10] of the new company called Destiny Conferencing.

Destiny Conferencing licensed its patent portfolio to HP which became the first large company to join the telepresence industry, soon followed by others such as Cisco and Polycom (now called Poly).[11] After forming a distribution agreement with Pleasanton-based Polycom (now Poly), Destiny Conferencing sold on January 5, 2007, to Polycom (now Poly) for $60 million.

 
First Telepresence Systems in 1993 (TeleSuite): Englewood, Ohio to New York City

A telepresence research project has started in 1990. Located at the University of Toronto, the Ontario Telepresence Project (OTP) was an interdisciplinary effort involving social sciences and engineering. Its final report stated that it "...was a three year, $4.8 million pre-competitive research project whose mandate was to design and field trial advanced media space systems in a variety of workplaces in order to gain insights into key sociological and engineering issues. The OTP, which has ended in December 1994, was part of the International Telepresence Project which linked Ontario researchers to their counterparts in four European nations. The Project's major sponsor was the Government of Ontario, through two of its Centres of Excellence—the Information Technology Research Centre (ITRC) and the Telecommunications Research Institute of Ontario (TRIO)."[12]

Benefits Edit

 
A modular telepresence system

An industry expert described some benefits of telepresence: "There were four drivers for our decision to do more business over video and telepresence. We wanted to reduce our travel spend, reduce our carbon footprint and environmental impact, improve our employees' work/life balance, and improve employee productivity.".[13]

 
American exile Edward Snowden participates in a TED talk in Texas from Russia via telepresence robot, March 2014

Rather than traveling great distances in order to have a face-face meeting, it is now commonplace to use a telepresence system instead, which uses a multiple codec video system (which is what the word "telepresence" most currently represents). Each member/party of the meeting uses a telepresence room to "dial in" and can see/talk to every other member on a screen/screens as if they were in the same room. This brings enormous time and cost benefits. It is also superior to phone conferencing (except in cost), as the visual aspect greatly enhances communications, allowing for perceptions of facial expressions and other body languages.

Mobile collaboration systems combine the use of video, audio and on-screen drawing capabilities using newest generation hand-held mobile devices to enable multi-party conferencing in real-time, independent of location. Benefits include cost-efficiencies resulting from accelerated problem resolution, reductions in downtimes and travel, improvements in customer service and increased productivity.[14]

Implementation Edit

Telepresence has been described as the human experience of being fully present at a live real-world location remote from one's own physical location. Someone experiencing video telepresence would therefore be able to behave and receive stimuli as if part of a meeting at the remote site. The aforementioned would result in interactive participation of group activities that would bring benefits to a wide range of users.[15]

Implementation of human sensory elements Edit

To provide a telepresence experience, technologies are required that implement the human sensory elements of vision, sound, and manipulation.

Vision and sound Edit

A minimum system usually includes visual feedback. Ideally, the entire field of view of the user is filled with a view of the remote location, and the viewpoint corresponds to the movement and orientation of the user's head. In this way, it differs from television or cinema, where the viewpoint is out of the control of the viewer.

In order to achieve this, the user may be provided with either a very large (or wraparound) screen, or small displays mounted directly in front of the eyes. The latter provides a particularly convincing 3D sensation. The movements of the user's head must be sensed, and the camera must mimic those movements accurately and in real time. This is important to prevent unintended motion sickness.

Another source of future improvement to telepresence displays, compared by some to holograms, is a projected display technology featuring life-sized imagery.[16]

Sound is generally the easiest sensation to implement with high fidelity, based on the foundational telephone technology dating back more than 130 years. Very high-fidelity sound equipment has also been available for a considerable period of time, with stereophonic sound being more convincing than monaural sound.

Manipulation Edit

 
Monty, a telemanipulation prototype from Anybots

The ability to manipulate a remote object or environment is an important aspect for some telepresence users and can be implemented in a large number of ways depending on the needs of the user. Typically, the movements of the user's hands (position in space and posture of the fingers) are sensed by wired gloves, inertial sensors, or absolute spatial position sensors. A robot in the remote location then copies those movements as closely as possible. This ability is also known as teleoperation.

The more closely the robot re-creates the form factor of the human hand, the greater the sense of telepresence. The complexity of robotic effectors varies greatly, from simple one axis grippers, to fully anthropomorphic robot hands.

Haptic teleoperation refers to a system that provides some sort of tactile force feedback to the user, so the user feels some approximation of the weight, firmness, size, and/or texture of the remote objects manipulated by the robot. A new form of technology, called collaborative telepresence, is currently being developed which will eventually be used to collaborate with others while seeming like you are in the same room as the other person, keeping a normal social distance. Collaborative telepresence uses haptic sensors like these to allow a sense of touch.

Freedom of movement Edit

 
iRobot Ava 500, an autonomous roaming telepresence robot.

The prevalence of high quality video conferencing using mobile devices, tablets and portable computers has enabled considerable growth in telepresence robots to help give a better sense of remote physical presence for communication and collaboration in the office, home or school when one cannot be there in person. The robot avatar can move or look around at the command of the remote person. Drivable telepresence robots – typically contain a display (integrated or separate phone or tablet) mounted on a roaming base. Some examples of roaming telepresence robots include Beam by Suitable Technologies, Double by Double Robotics, Ava Telepresence by Ava Robotics, Anybots, Vgo, TeleMe by Mantarobot, and Romo by Romotive.[17]

More modern roaming telepresence robots may include an ability to operate autonomously. The robots can map out the space and be able to avoid obstacles while driving themselves between rooms and their docking stations.[18]

Effectiveness Edit

Telepresence's effectiveness varies by degree of fidelity. Research has noted that telepresence solutions differ in degree of implementation, from "immersive" through "adaptive" to "lite" solutions.[19] At the top are immersive solutions where the environments at both ends are highly controlled (and often the same) with respect to lighting, acoustics, decor and furniture, thereby giving all the participants the impression they are together at the same table in the same room, thus engendering the "immersive" label.

Adaptive telepresence solutions may use the same technology, but the environments at both ends are not highly controlled and hence often differ. Adaptive solutions differ from telepresence lite solutions not in terms of control of environments, but in terms of integration of technology. Adaptive solutions use a managed service, whereas telepresence lite solutions use components that someone must integrate.

Transparency of implementation Edit

 
A telepresence conference between participants in Ghana and Newark, New Jersey in 2012

A good telepresence strategy puts the human factors first, focusing on visual collaboration configurations that closely replicate the brain's innate preferences for interpersonal communications, separating from the unnatural "talking heads" experience of traditional videoconferencing. These cues include life–size participants, fluid motion, accurate flesh tones and the appearance of true eye contact.[20] This is already a well-established technology, used by many businesses today. The chief executive officer of Cisco Systems, John Chambers in June 2006 at the Networkers Conference compared telepresence to teleporting from Star Trek, and said that he saw the technology as a potential billion dollar market for Cisco.[21]

Rarely will a telepresence system provide such a transparent implementation with such comprehensive and convincing stimuli that the user perceives no differences from actual presence. But the user may set aside such differences, depending on the application.

The fairly simple telephone achieves a limited form of telepresence using just the human sensory element of hearing, in that users consider themselves to be talking to each other rather than talking to the telephone itself.

Watching television, for example, although it stimulates our primary senses of vision and hearing, rarely gives the impression that the watcher is no longer at home. However, television sometimes engages the senses sufficiently to trigger emotional responses from viewers somewhat like those experienced by people who directly witness or experience events. Televised depictions of sports events as an example can elicit strong emotions from viewers.

As the screen size increases, so does the sense of immersion, as well as the range of subjective mental experiences available to viewers. Some viewers have reported a sensation of genuine vertigo or motion sickness while watching IMAX movies of flying or outdoor sequences.

Because most currently feasible telepresence gear leaves something to be desired; the user must suspend disbelief to some degree, and choose to act in a natural way, appropriate to the remote location, perhaps using some skill to operate the equipment. In contrast, a telephone user does not see herself as "operating" the telephone but merely talking to another person with it.

Related technologies Edit

Virtual presence (virtual reality) Edit

 
An Online Video Web Conference in an office, December 2010.

Telepresence refers to a user interacting with another live, real place, and is distinct from virtual presence, where the user is given the impression of being in a simulated environment. Telepresence and virtual presence rely on similar user-interface equipment, and they share the common feature that the relevant portions of the user's experience at some point in the process will be transmitted in an abstract (usually digital) representation. The main functional difference is the entity on the other end: a real environment in the case of telepresence, vs. a computer in the case of immersive virtual reality.

Presence is very similar to distal attribution or externalization which is like projecting one's presence and mind beyond the limits of our sensory organs and perceiving the environment in such a way. A distinction is made between two separate perceptions. The first being the unmediated perceptions in which we are unable to feel anything beyond our physical surroundings. The second being the mediated presence through technology which forces us to suddenly perceive two different environments at the same time: The one immediately around us and the one projected for us through technology. Mediated experiences are not limited to virtual technology and can also be experienced with spatially distant places such as space with a telescope or a camera.[22]

Applications Edit

Application examples could be cited within emergency management and security services, B&I, and the entertainment and education industries.[15]

Connecting communities Edit

Telepresence can be used to establish a sense of shared presence or shared space among geographically separated members of a group.[citation needed]

Hazardous environments Edit

 
Robonaut 2 aboard the International Space Station

Many other applications in situations where humans are exposed to hazardous situations are readily recognised as suitable candidates for telepresence. Mining, bomb disposal, military operations, rescue of victims from fire, toxic atmospheres, deep sea exploration, or even hostage situations, are some examples. Telepresence also plays a critical role in the exploration of other worlds, such as with the Mars Exploration Rovers, which are teleoperated from Earth.

Pipeline inspection Edit

Small diameter pipes otherwise inaccessible for the examination can now be viewed using pipeline video inspection.

Remote surgery Edit

The possibility of being able to project the knowledge and the physical skill of a surgeon over long distances has many attractions. Thus, again there is considerable research underway in the subject. (Locally controlled robots are currently being used for joint replacement surgery as they are more precise in milling bone to receive the joints.) The armed forces have an obvious interest since the combination of telepresence, teleoperation, and telerobotics can potentially save the lives of battle casualties by allowing them prompt attention in mobile operating theatres by remote surgeons.

Recently, teleconferencing has been used in medicine (telemedicine or telematics), mainly employing audio-visual exchange, for the performance of real time remote surgical operations – as demonstrated in Regensburg, Germany in 2002.[23] In addition to audio-visual data, the transfer of haptic (tactile) information has also been demonstrated in telemedicine.[24]

Education Edit

 
A professional development expert in Denver uses telepresence to coach a teacher in Utah during the initial research of Project ThereNow.

Research has been conducted on the use of telepresence to provide professional development to teachers. Research has shown that one of the most effective forms of teacher professional development is coaching, or cognitive apprenticeship. The application of telepresence shows promise for making this approach to teacher professional development practical.[25]

The benefits of enabling schoolchildren to take an active part in exploration have also been shown by the JASON and the NASA Ames Research Center programs. The ability of a pupil, student, or researcher to explore an otherwise inaccessible location is a very attractive proposition; For example, locations where the passage of too many people is harming the immediate environment or the artifacts themselves, e.g. undersea exploration of coral reefs, ancient Egyptian tombs, and more recent works of art.

Another application is for the remote classroom which allows a professor to teach students in different campuses at the same time. An example of this application is in classrooms of the law schools of Rutgers University. Two identical rooms are located in two metropolitan areas. Each classroom is equipped with studio lighting, audio, and video conference equipment connected to a 200-inch monitor on the wall that students face to give an impression that they are all in the same classroom. This allows professors to be on either campus and facilitates the interaction among students in both campuses during the classes.[26]

Telepresence art Edit

True telepresence is a multidisciplinary art and science that foundationally integrates engineering, psychology, and the art of television broadcast.

In 1998, Diller and Scofidio created the "Refresh", an Internet-based art installation that juxtaposed a live web camera with recorded videos staged by professional actors. Each image was accompanied with a fictional narrative which made it difficult to distinguish which was the live web camera.

 
A soap opera for iMacs

In 1993, Eduardo Kac and Ed Bennett created a telepresence installation "Ornitorrinco on the Moon", for the international telecommunication arts festival "Blurred Boundaries" (Entgrenzte Grenzen II). It was coordinated by Kulturdata, in Graz, Austria, and was connected around the world.

From 1997 to the present Ghislaine Boddington of shinkansen and body>data>space has explored, in a collaboration process she has called The Weave[27] using performing arts techniques, the extended use of telepresence into festivals, arts centres and clubs and has directed numerous workshops leading to exploration of telepresence by many artists worldwide. This methodology has been used extensively to develop skills in tele-intuition for young people in preparation for the future world of work through the body>data>space / NESTA project "Robots and Avatars" an innovative project explores how young people will work and play with new representational forms of themselves and others in virtual and physical life in the next 10–15 years.

An overview of telepresence in dance and theatre through the last 20 years is given in «Excited Atoms»[28] research document by Judith Staines (2009) which one can download from the On The Move website.

Vendors Edit

Popular culture Edit

Telepresence is represented in media and entertainment.

Literature Edit

  • The Naked Sun (1957) – a novel mostly occurring on Solaria, a planet with an extremely low population where all personal contact is considered obscene, and all communication occurs through holographic telepresence.
  • Neuromancer (1984) – a novel that not only uses telepresence extensively but introduces cyberspace and the Internet (aka the Matrix) as the underlying vehicle to make telepresence possible.

Television Edit

Film Edit

Video games Edit

Comics Edit

  • Lamar Waldron's M.I.C.R.A.: Mind Controlled Remote Automaton (1986-88), related the story of a college female paralyzed by a neck injury, who volunteered to be the remote pilot of an android body created by one of her professors.
  • The Surrogates, a 2005–2006 comic book series, inspired the film Surrogates (2009) and explains about a future where humans have a widespread use of mind-controlled androids.

Virtual reality communities Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ S.Tachi, K.Tanie and K.Komoriya: Evaluation device of mobility aids for the blind, Japanese Patent 1462696 filed on December 26, 1980.
  2. ^ S.Tachi, K.Tanie and K.Komoriya: Operation method of manipulators with sensoryinformation display functions, Japanese Patent 1458263 filed on January 14, 1981.
  3. ^ S.Tachi and M.Abe: Study on Telexistence (I) -Desigan of Visual Display-, Proceedings of the 21st SICE Annual Conference, pp.167-168, Tokyo, July 28–30, 1982.
  4. ^ S. Tachi, K. Tanie, K. Komoriya and M. Kaneko, Tele-existence (I): Design and Evaluation of a Visual Display with Sensation of Presence, RoManSy 84 The Fifth CISM-IFToMM Symposium. 1984: 206–215.
  5. ^ a b Marvin Minsky (June 1980). "Telepresence". Omni.
  6. ^ Kim, Won S.; Rosenberg, Louis B. (21 December 1993). Virtual fixtures as tools to enhance operator performance in telepresence environments. Proc. SPIE 2057, Telemanipulator Technology and Space Telerobotics. Proceedings. Vol. 2057. pp. 10–21. doi:10.1117/12.164901. ISSN 0277-786X.
  7. ^ L. B. Rosenberg. The Use of Virtual Fixtures As Perceptual Overlays to Enhance Operator Performance in Remote Environments. Technical Report AL-TR-0089, USAF Armstrong Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB OH, 1992.
  8. ^ Rosenberg, "Virtual Fixtures: Perceptual Overlays Enhance Operator Performance in Telepresence Tasks," Ph.D. Dissertation, Stanford University.
  9. ^ Human Productivity Lab Whitepaper
  10. ^ Options, Telepresence (28 April 2018). "Telepresence Options Website". www.telepresenceoptions.com.
  11. ^ Bushaus, Dawn (March 17, 2008). "Telepresence: Ready For Its Close-Up".
  12. ^ "Final Report" (PDF). toronto.edu.
  13. ^ Companies Worldwide Rely on Polycom Video and Telepresence to Cut Carbon Emissions for a Greener Planet 2008-06-09 at the Wayback Machine, CNN June 5, 2008
  14. ^ Herrell, Elizabeth (March 9, 2010). . Forrester Research White Paper. Archived from the original on January 17, 2012. Retrieved May 23, 2011.
  15. ^ a b Video Conferencing: A guide to making a Telepresence Business Case 2008-06-28 at the Wayback Machine Matt Walker, 2007
  16. ^ Barras, Colin (26 November 2009). "'Holographic' Videoconferencing Moves Nearer to Market". New Scientist. p. 23. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
  17. ^ Lehrbaum, Rick (January 11, 2013). "Attack of the Telepresence Robots!". InfoWeek. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  18. ^ Honig, Zach (March 17, 2014). "iRobot's Ava 500 telepresence-on-a-stick is rolling out now (update: $69,500!!)". Engadget. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  19. ^ Dataquest Insight: The Telepresence Market in India, 2008 2013-05-12 at the Wayback Machine, Gartner December 16, 2008
  20. ^ Telepresence Consulting – Human Productivity Lab 2007-04-23 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Sanders, Tom (21 June 2006). . Archived from the original on 2007-09-30.
  22. ^ Steuer, Jonathan (1992). "Defining Virtual Reality: Dimensions Determining Telepresence". Journal of Communication. 42 (4): 73–93. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.1992.tb00812.x. ISSN 0021-9916.
  23. ^ M. Nerlich & U. Schächinger (Eds) - Integration of Health Telematics into Medical Practice - IOS Press, 2003
  24. ^ Westwood et al. (Eds.) - Medicine meets Virtual Reality 12: Studies in Health Technology & Informatics - W. Kahled, S. Reichling, O.T. Bruhns, H. Böse, M. Baumann, S. Egersdörfer, D. Klein, A. Tunayer, H. Freimuth, A. Lorenz, A. Pessavento & H. Ermert - Palpation Imaging using a Haptic System for Virtual Reality applications in Medicine. - pp 147-153, IOS Press, 2004
  25. ^ "Evaluating the Effectiveness of a Telepresence-Enabled Cognitive Apprenticeship Model of Teacher Professional Development by R. Shawn Edmondson, Ph.D. 2007-04-18 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Heyboer, Kelly (10 April 2015). "Why is Rutgers merging its law schools? The deans answer your questions". The Star-Ledger. Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  27. ^ The Weave[permanent dead link], Virtual presence physical beings – from telegraph to telecast – a reflection on virtual beingness Ghislaine Boddington November 2000, commissioned by ResCen, Middlesex University
  28. ^ "Excited Atoms", Excited Atoms outlines a history of virtual mobility in performance, presents the main types of work with inspiring current examples and traces some of the most critical issues and motivations for artists, cultural producers and promoters to collaborate, share, make, question, present and innovate using virtual mobility.

Further reading Edit

  • "Telepresence" (Minsky 1980; Sheridan 1992a; Barfield, Zelter, Sheridan, & Slater 1995; Welch, Blackmon, Liu, Mellers, & Stark 1996)
  • "Virtual Presence" (Barfield et al., 1995)
  • Oliver Grau: Virtual Art: From Illusion to Immersion, MIT-Press, Cambridge 2003 ISBN 0-262-57223-0
  • Eduardo Kac: Telepresence and Bio Art—Networking Humans, Rabbits and Robot (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2005) ISBN 0-472-06810-5
  • "Being There" (Reeves 1991; Heeter 1992; Barfield et al., 1995; Zhoa 2003)
  • "A perceptual illusion of non-mediation" (Lombard & Ditton 1997)
  • "The suspension of disbelief" (Slater & Ushoh 1994)
  • Sheridan, Thomas B. (1992), "Telerobotics, Automation, and Human Supervisory Control, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Second edition (2003) ISBN 0-262-51547-4
  • unknown title (Sheridan, 1992, 1992; Barfield & Weghorst, 1993; Slater & Usoh, 1994; Barfield, Sheridan, Zeltzer, Slater, 1995)

External links Edit

  • Markoff, John (September 4, 2010). "The Boss Is Robotic, and Rolling Up Behind You". The New York Times.

telepresence, refers, technologies, which, allow, person, feel, they, were, present, give, appearance, effect, being, present, telerobotics, place, other, than, their, true, location, requires, that, users, senses, interact, with, specific, stimuli, order, pro. Telepresence refers to a set of technologies which allow a person to feel as if they were present to give the appearance or effect of being present via telerobotics at a place other than their true location Telepresence requires that the users senses interact with specific stimuli in order to provide the feeling of being in that other location Additionally users may be given the ability to affect the remote location In this case the user s position movements actions voice etc may be sensed to transmit and duplicate in the remote location to bring about this effect Therefore information may be traveling in both directions between the user and the remote location A popular application is found in telepresence videoconferencing the highest possible level of videotelephony Telepresence via video deploys greater technical sophistication and improved fidelity of both sight and sound than in traditional videoconferencing Technical advancements in mobile collaboration have also extended the capabilities of videoconferencing beyond the boardroom for use with hand held mobile devices enabling collaboration independent of location A similar or identical concept is telexistence which was first proposed by Susumu Tachi in Japan in 1980 1 and 1981 2 as patents and the first report was published in Japanese in 1982 3 and in English in 1984 4 Contents 1 History 2 Benefits 3 Implementation 3 1 Implementation of human sensory elements 3 1 1 Vision and sound 3 1 2 Manipulation 3 1 3 Freedom of movement 3 2 Effectiveness 3 3 Transparency of implementation 4 Related technologies 4 1 Virtual presence virtual reality 5 Applications 5 1 Connecting communities 5 2 Hazardous environments 5 3 Pipeline inspection 5 4 Remote surgery 5 5 Education 5 6 Telepresence art 6 Vendors 7 Popular culture 7 1 Literature 7 2 Television 7 3 Film 7 4 Video games 7 5 Comics 7 6 Virtual reality communities 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory EditSee also History of videotelephony In a pioneering paper the U S cognitive scientist Marvin Minsky attributed the development of the idea of telepresence to science fiction author Robert A Heinlein My first vision of a remote controlled economy came from Robert A Heinlein s prophetic 1948 novel Waldo wrote Minsky 5 In his science fiction short story Waldo 1942 Heinlein first proposed a primitive telepresence master slave manipulator system The Brother Assassin written by Fred Saberhagen in 1969 introduced the complete concept for a telepresence master slave humanoid system In the novel the concept is described as follows And a moment later it seemed to all his senses that he had been transported from the master down into the body of the slave unit standing beneath it on the floor As the control of its movements passed over to him the slave started gradually to lean to one side and he moved its foot to maintain balance as naturally as he moved his own Tilting back his head he could look up through the slave s eyes to see the master unit with himself inside maintaining the same attitude on its complex suspension nbsp Early system for immersive telepresence USAF 1992 Virtual Fixtures The term telepresence a neologism due to the futurist Patrick Gunkel was introduced to the public in a 1980 article by Minsky who outlined his vision for an adapted version of the older concept of teleoperation that focused on giving a remote participant a feeling of actually being present at a different location 5 One of the first systems to create a fully immersive illusion of presence in a remote location was the Virtual Fixtures platform developed in 1992 at the U S Air Force s Armstrong Labs by inventor Louis Rosenberg The system included stereoscopic image display from the remote environment as well as immersive touch feedback using a full upper body exoskeleton 6 7 8 The first commercially successful telepresence company Teleport which was later renamed TeleSuite was founded in 1993 by David Allen and Herold Williams 9 Before TeleSuite they ran a resort business from which the original concept emerged because they often found businesspeople would have to cut their stays short to participate in important meetings Their idea was to develop a technology that would allow businesspeople to attend their meetings without leaving the resorts so that they could lengthen their hotel stays nbsp A Tandberg E20 high resolution videoconferencing phone meant to replace conventional desktop phonesHilton Hotels had originally licensed to install them in their hotels throughout the United States and other countries but use was low The idea lost momentum with Hilton eventually backing out TeleSuite later began to focus less on the hospitality industry and more on business oriented telepresence systems Shareholders eventually held enough stock to replace the company s original leadership which ultimately led to its collapse citation needed David Allen purchased all of the assets of TeleSuite and appointed Scott Allen as president 10 of the new company called Destiny Conferencing Destiny Conferencing licensed its patent portfolio to HP which became the first large company to join the telepresence industry soon followed by others such as Cisco and Polycom now called Poly 11 After forming a distribution agreement with Pleasanton based Polycom now Poly Destiny Conferencing sold on January 5 2007 to Polycom now Poly for 60 million nbsp First Telepresence Systems in 1993 TeleSuite Englewood Ohio to New York CityA telepresence research project has started in 1990 Located at the University of Toronto the Ontario Telepresence Project OTP was an interdisciplinary effort involving social sciences and engineering Its final report stated that it was a three year 4 8 million pre competitive research project whose mandate was to design and field trial advanced media space systems in a variety of workplaces in order to gain insights into key sociological and engineering issues The OTP which has ended in December 1994 was part of the International Telepresence Project which linked Ontario researchers to their counterparts in four European nations The Project s major sponsor was the Government of Ontario through two of its Centres of Excellence the Information Technology Research Centre ITRC and the Telecommunications Research Institute of Ontario TRIO 12 Benefits Edit nbsp A modular telepresence systemAn industry expert described some benefits of telepresence There were four drivers for our decision to do more business over video and telepresence We wanted to reduce our travel spend reduce our carbon footprint and environmental impact improve our employees work life balance and improve employee productivity 13 nbsp American exile Edward Snowden participates in a TED talk in Texas from Russia via telepresence robot March 2014Rather than traveling great distances in order to have a face face meeting it is now commonplace to use a telepresence system instead which uses a multiple codec video system which is what the word telepresence most currently represents Each member party of the meeting uses a telepresence room to dial in and can see talk to every other member on a screen screens as if they were in the same room This brings enormous time and cost benefits It is also superior to phone conferencing except in cost as the visual aspect greatly enhances communications allowing for perceptions of facial expressions and other body languages Mobile collaboration systems combine the use of video audio and on screen drawing capabilities using newest generation hand held mobile devices to enable multi party conferencing in real time independent of location Benefits include cost efficiencies resulting from accelerated problem resolution reductions in downtimes and travel improvements in customer service and increased productivity 14 Implementation EditTelepresence has been described as the human experience of being fully present at a live real world location remote from one s own physical location Someone experiencing video telepresence would therefore be able to behave and receive stimuli as if part of a meeting at the remote site The aforementioned would result in interactive participation of group activities that would bring benefits to a wide range of users 15 Implementation of human sensory elements Edit To provide a telepresence experience technologies are required that implement the human sensory elements of vision sound and manipulation Vision and sound Edit A minimum system usually includes visual feedback Ideally the entire field of view of the user is filled with a view of the remote location and the viewpoint corresponds to the movement and orientation of the user s head In this way it differs from television or cinema where the viewpoint is out of the control of the viewer In order to achieve this the user may be provided with either a very large or wraparound screen or small displays mounted directly in front of the eyes The latter provides a particularly convincing 3D sensation The movements of the user s head must be sensed and the camera must mimic those movements accurately and in real time This is important to prevent unintended motion sickness Another source of future improvement to telepresence displays compared by some to holograms is a projected display technology featuring life sized imagery 16 Sound is generally the easiest sensation to implement with high fidelity based on the foundational telephone technology dating back more than 130 years Very high fidelity sound equipment has also been available for a considerable period of time with stereophonic sound being more convincing than monaural sound Manipulation Edit nbsp Monty a telemanipulation prototype from AnybotsThe ability to manipulate a remote object or environment is an important aspect for some telepresence users and can be implemented in a large number of ways depending on the needs of the user Typically the movements of the user s hands position in space and posture of the fingers are sensed by wired gloves inertial sensors or absolute spatial position sensors A robot in the remote location then copies those movements as closely as possible This ability is also known as teleoperation The more closely the robot re creates the form factor of the human hand the greater the sense of telepresence The complexity of robotic effectors varies greatly from simple one axis grippers to fully anthropomorphic robot hands Haptic teleoperation refers to a system that provides some sort of tactile force feedback to the user so the user feels some approximation of the weight firmness size and or texture of the remote objects manipulated by the robot A new form of technology called collaborative telepresence is currently being developed which will eventually be used to collaborate with others while seeming like you are in the same room as the other person keeping a normal social distance Collaborative telepresence uses haptic sensors like these to allow a sense of touch Freedom of movement Edit nbsp iRobot Ava 500 an autonomous roaming telepresence robot The prevalence of high quality video conferencing using mobile devices tablets and portable computers has enabled considerable growth in telepresence robots to help give a better sense of remote physical presence for communication and collaboration in the office home or school when one cannot be there in person The robot avatar can move or look around at the command of the remote person Drivable telepresence robots typically contain a display integrated or separate phone or tablet mounted on a roaming base Some examples of roaming telepresence robots include Beam by Suitable Technologies Double by Double Robotics Ava Telepresence by Ava Robotics Anybots Vgo TeleMe by Mantarobot and Romo by Romotive 17 More modern roaming telepresence robots may include an ability to operate autonomously The robots can map out the space and be able to avoid obstacles while driving themselves between rooms and their docking stations 18 Effectiveness Edit Telepresence s effectiveness varies by degree of fidelity Research has noted that telepresence solutions differ in degree of implementation from immersive through adaptive to lite solutions 19 At the top are immersive solutions where the environments at both ends are highly controlled and often the same with respect to lighting acoustics decor and furniture thereby giving all the participants the impression they are together at the same table in the same room thus engendering the immersive label Adaptive telepresence solutions may use the same technology but the environments at both ends are not highly controlled and hence often differ Adaptive solutions differ from telepresence lite solutions not in terms of control of environments but in terms of integration of technology Adaptive solutions use a managed service whereas telepresence lite solutions use components that someone must integrate Transparency of implementation Edit nbsp A telepresence conference between participants in Ghana and Newark New Jersey in 2012A good telepresence strategy puts the human factors first focusing on visual collaboration configurations that closely replicate the brain s innate preferences for interpersonal communications separating from the unnatural talking heads experience of traditional videoconferencing These cues include life size participants fluid motion accurate flesh tones and the appearance of true eye contact 20 This is already a well established technology used by many businesses today The chief executive officer of Cisco Systems John Chambers in June 2006 at the Networkers Conference compared telepresence to teleporting from Star Trek and said that he saw the technology as a potential billion dollar market for Cisco 21 Rarely will a telepresence system provide such a transparent implementation with such comprehensive and convincing stimuli that the user perceives no differences from actual presence But the user may set aside such differences depending on the application The fairly simple telephone achieves a limited form of telepresence using just the human sensory element of hearing in that users consider themselves to be talking to each other rather than talking to the telephone itself Watching television for example although it stimulates our primary senses of vision and hearing rarely gives the impression that the watcher is no longer at home However television sometimes engages the senses sufficiently to trigger emotional responses from viewers somewhat like those experienced by people who directly witness or experience events Televised depictions of sports events as an example can elicit strong emotions from viewers As the screen size increases so does the sense of immersion as well as the range of subjective mental experiences available to viewers Some viewers have reported a sensation of genuine vertigo or motion sickness while watching IMAX movies of flying or outdoor sequences Because most currently feasible telepresence gear leaves something to be desired the user must suspend disbelief to some degree and choose to act in a natural way appropriate to the remote location perhaps using some skill to operate the equipment In contrast a telephone user does not see herself as operating the telephone but merely talking to another person with it Related technologies EditVirtual presence virtual reality Edit nbsp An Online Video Web Conference in an office December 2010 Telepresence refers to a user interacting with another live real place and is distinct from virtual presence where the user is given the impression of being in a simulated environment Telepresence and virtual presence rely on similar user interface equipment and they share the common feature that the relevant portions of the user s experience at some point in the process will be transmitted in an abstract usually digital representation The main functional difference is the entity on the other end a real environment in the case of telepresence vs a computer in the case of immersive virtual reality Presence is very similar to distal attribution or externalization which is like projecting one s presence and mind beyond the limits of our sensory organs and perceiving the environment in such a way A distinction is made between two separate perceptions The first being the unmediated perceptions in which we are unable to feel anything beyond our physical surroundings The second being the mediated presence through technology which forces us to suddenly perceive two different environments at the same time The one immediately around us and the one projected for us through technology Mediated experiences are not limited to virtual technology and can also be experienced with spatially distant places such as space with a telescope or a camera 22 Applications EditApplication examples could be cited within emergency management and security services B amp I and the entertainment and education industries 15 Connecting communities Edit Telepresence can be used to establish a sense of shared presence or shared space among geographically separated members of a group citation needed Hazardous environments Edit nbsp Robonaut 2 aboard the International Space StationMany other applications in situations where humans are exposed to hazardous situations are readily recognised as suitable candidates for telepresence Mining bomb disposal military operations rescue of victims from fire toxic atmospheres deep sea exploration or even hostage situations are some examples Telepresence also plays a critical role in the exploration of other worlds such as with the Mars Exploration Rovers which are teleoperated from Earth Pipeline inspection Edit Small diameter pipes otherwise inaccessible for the examination can now be viewed using pipeline video inspection Remote surgery Edit The possibility of being able to project the knowledge and the physical skill of a surgeon over long distances has many attractions Thus again there is considerable research underway in the subject Locally controlled robots are currently being used for joint replacement surgery as they are more precise in milling bone to receive the joints The armed forces have an obvious interest since the combination of telepresence teleoperation and telerobotics can potentially save the lives of battle casualties by allowing them prompt attention in mobile operating theatres by remote surgeons Recently teleconferencing has been used in medicine telemedicine or telematics mainly employing audio visual exchange for the performance of real time remote surgical operations as demonstrated in Regensburg Germany in 2002 23 In addition to audio visual data the transfer of haptic tactile information has also been demonstrated in telemedicine 24 Education Edit nbsp A professional development expert in Denver uses telepresence to coach a teacher in Utah during the initial research of Project ThereNow Research has been conducted on the use of telepresence to provide professional development to teachers Research has shown that one of the most effective forms of teacher professional development is coaching or cognitive apprenticeship The application of telepresence shows promise for making this approach to teacher professional development practical 25 The benefits of enabling schoolchildren to take an active part in exploration have also been shown by the JASON and the NASA Ames Research Center programs The ability of a pupil student or researcher to explore an otherwise inaccessible location is a very attractive proposition For example locations where the passage of too many people is harming the immediate environment or the artifacts themselves e g undersea exploration of coral reefs ancient Egyptian tombs and more recent works of art Another application is for the remote classroom which allows a professor to teach students in different campuses at the same time An example of this application is in classrooms of the law schools of Rutgers University Two identical rooms are located in two metropolitan areas Each classroom is equipped with studio lighting audio and video conference equipment connected to a 200 inch monitor on the wall that students face to give an impression that they are all in the same classroom This allows professors to be on either campus and facilitates the interaction among students in both campuses during the classes 26 Telepresence art Edit True telepresence is a multidisciplinary art and science that foundationally integrates engineering psychology and the art of television broadcast In 1998 Diller and Scofidio created the Refresh an Internet based art installation that juxtaposed a live web camera with recorded videos staged by professional actors Each image was accompanied with a fictional narrative which made it difficult to distinguish which was the live web camera nbsp A soap opera for iMacsIn 1993 Eduardo Kac and Ed Bennett created a telepresence installation Ornitorrinco on the Moon for the international telecommunication arts festival Blurred Boundaries Entgrenzte Grenzen II It was coordinated by Kulturdata in Graz Austria and was connected around the world From 1997 to the present Ghislaine Boddington of shinkansen and body gt data gt space has explored in a collaboration process she has called The Weave 27 using performing arts techniques the extended use of telepresence into festivals arts centres and clubs and has directed numerous workshops leading to exploration of telepresence by many artists worldwide This methodology has been used extensively to develop skills in tele intuition for young people in preparation for the future world of work through the body gt data gt space NESTA project Robots and Avatars an innovative project explores how young people will work and play with new representational forms of themselves and others in virtual and physical life in the next 10 15 years An overview of telepresence in dance and theatre through the last 20 years is given in Excited Atoms 28 research document by Judith Staines 2009 which one can download from the On The Move website Vendors EditFurther information List of video telecommunication services and product brandsPopular culture EditTelepresence is represented in media and entertainment Literature Edit The Naked Sun 1957 a novel mostly occurring on Solaria a planet with an extremely low population where all personal contact is considered obscene and all communication occurs through holographic telepresence Neuromancer 1984 a novel that not only uses telepresence extensively but introduces cyberspace and the Internet aka the Matrix as the underlying vehicle to make telepresence possible Television Edit Space Above and Beyond Episode 20 Star Dust April 19 1996 24 2001 2010 The Big Bang Theory Episode 65 The Cruciferous Vegetable Amplification September 2010 Modern Family Episode 144 American Skyper May 2015 Bob s Burgers Episode 115 Ex Mach Tina January 2017 Community Episode 102 Laws of Robotics and Party Rights April 2015 Film Edit Main category Films about telepresence Iron Man 3 2013 Tony Stark uses the Mark 42 suit using telepresence technology Ra One 2011 Darkdrive 1996 Avatar 2009 G I Joe The Rise of Cobra 2009 Gamer 2009 Surrogates 2009 Sleep Dealer 2008 Avalon 2001 The Matrix 1999 The Star Wars films 1977 present with holographic technology used for communication A Hologram for the King 2016 uses telepresence as a main themeVideo games Edit Splinter Cell Conviction 2010 Half Life 2 Episode Two 2007 Mass Effect 2 Commander Shepard communicates with the Illusive Man using a quantum entanglement based telepresence system Elite Dangerous 2014 players and non player characters can utilize telepresence to perform as crew members without risk of death Death Stranding 2019 telepresence plays a prominent and important role in communication for the denizens of the game s envisioned future Comics Edit Lamar Waldron s M I C R A Mind Controlled Remote Automaton 1986 88 related the story of a college female paralyzed by a neck injury who volunteered to be the remote pilot of an android body created by one of her professors The Surrogates a 2005 2006 comic book series inspired the film Surrogates 2009 and explains about a future where humans have a widespread use of mind controlled androids Virtual reality communities Edit Active Worlds and Second Life allow voice chat with 3D avatars See also Edit nbsp Telecommunication portalAvatar computing Brain computer interface First person perspective Telecollaboration Telerobotics Unotchit Virtual fixture Virtual realityReferences Edit S Tachi K Tanie and K Komoriya Evaluation device of mobility aids for the blind Japanese Patent 1462696 filed on December 26 1980 S Tachi K Tanie and K Komoriya Operation method of manipulators with sensoryinformation display functions Japanese Patent 1458263 filed on January 14 1981 S Tachi and M Abe Study on Telexistence I Desigan of Visual Display Proceedings of the 21st SICE Annual Conference pp 167 168 Tokyo July 28 30 1982 S Tachi K Tanie K Komoriya and M Kaneko Tele existence I Design and Evaluation of a Visual Display with Sensation of Presence RoManSy 84 The Fifth CISM IFToMM Symposium 1984 206 215 a b Marvin Minsky June 1980 Telepresence Omni Kim Won S Rosenberg Louis B 21 December 1993 Virtual fixtures as tools to enhance operator performance in telepresence environments Proc SPIE 2057 Telemanipulator Technology and Space Telerobotics Proceedings Vol 2057 pp 10 21 doi 10 1117 12 164901 ISSN 0277 786X L B Rosenberg The Use of Virtual Fixtures As Perceptual Overlays to Enhance Operator Performance in Remote Environments Technical Report AL TR 0089 USAF Armstrong Laboratory Wright Patterson AFB OH 1992 Rosenberg Virtual Fixtures Perceptual Overlays Enhance Operator Performance in Telepresence Tasks Ph D Dissertation Stanford University Human Productivity Lab Whitepaper Options Telepresence 28 April 2018 Telepresence Options Website www telepresenceoptions com Bushaus Dawn March 17 2008 Telepresence Ready For Its Close Up Final Report PDF toronto edu Companies Worldwide Rely on Polycom Video and Telepresence to Cut Carbon Emissions for a Greener Planet Archived 2008 06 09 at the Wayback Machine CNN June 5 2008 Herrell Elizabeth March 9 2010 Enterprise Communications The Next Decade Forrester Research White Paper Archived from the original on January 17 2012 Retrieved May 23 2011 a b Video Conferencing A guide to making a Telepresence Business Case Archived 2008 06 28 at the Wayback Machine Matt Walker 2007 Barras Colin 26 November 2009 Holographic Videoconferencing Moves Nearer to Market New Scientist p 23 Retrieved 14 December 2009 Lehrbaum Rick January 11 2013 Attack of the Telepresence Robots InfoWeek Retrieved December 8 2013 Honig Zach March 17 2014 iRobot s Ava 500 telepresence on a stick is rolling out now update 69 500 Engadget Retrieved 4 July 2014 Dataquest Insight The Telepresence Market in India 2008 Archived 2013 05 12 at the Wayback Machine Gartner December 16 2008 Telepresence Consulting Human Productivity Lab Archived 2007 04 23 at the Wayback Machine Sanders Tom 21 June 2006 Cisco Sets Sail For Teleconferencing Archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Steuer Jonathan 1992 Defining Virtual Reality Dimensions Determining Telepresence Journal of Communication 42 4 73 93 doi 10 1111 j 1460 2466 1992 tb00812 x ISSN 0021 9916 M Nerlich amp U Schachinger Eds Integration of Health Telematics into Medical Practice IOS Press 2003 Westwood et al Eds Medicine meets Virtual Reality 12 Studies in Health Technology amp Informatics W Kahled S Reichling O T Bruhns H Bose M Baumann S Egersdorfer D Klein A Tunayer H Freimuth A Lorenz A Pessavento amp H Ermert Palpation Imaging using a Haptic System for Virtual Reality applications in Medicine pp 147 153 IOS Press 2004 Evaluating the Effectiveness of a Telepresence Enabled Cognitive Apprenticeship Model of Teacher Professional Development by R Shawn Edmondson Ph D Archived 2007 04 18 at the Wayback Machine Heyboer Kelly 10 April 2015 Why is Rutgers merging its law schools The deans answer your questions The Star Ledger Retrieved 10 April 2015 The Weave permanent dead link Virtual presence physical beings from telegraph to telecast a reflection on virtual beingness Ghislaine Boddington November 2000 commissioned by ResCen Middlesex University Excited Atoms Excited Atoms outlines a history of virtual mobility in performance presents the main types of work with inspiring current examples and traces some of the most critical issues and motivations for artists cultural producers and promoters to collaborate share make question present and innovate using virtual mobility Further reading Edit Telepresence Minsky 1980 Sheridan 1992a Barfield Zelter Sheridan amp Slater 1995 Welch Blackmon Liu Mellers amp Stark 1996 Virtual Presence Barfield et al 1995 Oliver Grau Virtual Art From Illusion to Immersion MIT Press Cambridge 2003 ISBN 0 262 57223 0 Eduardo Kac Telepresence and Bio Art Networking Humans Rabbits and Robot Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press 2005 ISBN 0 472 06810 5 Being There Reeves 1991 Heeter 1992 Barfield et al 1995 Zhoa 2003 A perceptual illusion of non mediation Lombard amp Ditton 1997 The suspension of disbelief Slater amp Ushoh 1994 Sheridan Thomas B 1992 Telerobotics Automation and Human Supervisory Control Cambridge MA MIT Press Second edition 2003 ISBN 0 262 51547 4 unknown title Sheridan 1992 1992 Barfield amp Weghorst 1993 Slater amp Usoh 1994 Barfield Sheridan Zeltzer Slater 1995 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Videoconferencing telepresence Markoff John September 4 2010 The Boss Is Robotic and Rolling Up Behind You The New York Times nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Telepresence Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Telepresence amp oldid 1179807213, wikipedia, 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