An Evaluation Study of Object Interaction Framework Design for XR-Enabled Games

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Description
In game development, interaction frameworks provide generic functionality for users to engage with virtual worlds and are required to enable this on nonstandard hardware such as extended reality platforms. Currently, no publicly accessible frameworks exist that implement interactive world objects

In game development, interaction frameworks provide generic functionality for users to engage with virtual worlds and are required to enable this on nonstandard hardware such as extended reality platforms. Currently, no publicly accessible frameworks exist that implement interactive world objects in XR settings, prompting the question: if one were to be made, how and why would it be usable? This thesis explores the properties that make an XR-enabled object interaction framework usable by game developers and game designers. This thesis introduces the basic form of such a framework and the design of a set of user studies centered around this framework’s utilization in a game development workflow. User feedback is gathered for the study’s results, and is evaluated around user perception of framework expressiveness, extensibility, and ease of use. The results of the study found that users primarily judged usability through comparisons to real-world equivalents, utilization of conventional systems, object interactivity, clarity of framework components, usability of framework toolkits and these are discussed in relation to existing research on virtual object interaction.
Date Created
2024
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Somatic Symptoms in Mexican-Origin Children: The Role of Familism and Family Conflict in the Context of COVID-19

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Description
Mexican-origin families (MO) have been more negatively impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic compared to White European-Americans. Latinx youth also reported increased concern about somatic symptoms (i.e. bodily symptoms) during the pandemic compared to non-Latinx peers. Current research on the pandemic

Mexican-origin families (MO) have been more negatively impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic compared to White European-Americans. Latinx youth also reported increased concern about somatic symptoms (i.e. bodily symptoms) during the pandemic compared to non-Latinx peers. Current research on the pandemic indicates that cohesive and supportive families fare better than families within high-conflict households. However, no research has directly examined parent-child conflict during the pandemic in relation to youth somatic symptoms. Previous studies considered cultural proxies as predictors of somatic symptoms in Latinx children, the specific influence of prominent cultural values like familism remains less explored. Familism, emphasizing family well-being, is considered protective for Latinx youth, but evidence suggests it may pose risks in high parent-child conflict households. Utilizing Qualtrics panel, I collected data from 301 MO parents reporting on a target child (Mage= 11.4 years, SD= 3.7; 50.2% female) between March and June 2022. Approximately 40% of parents completed the survey in Spanish. Parental familism dimensions (support, family as referent, and obligations) were assessed as well as youth somatic symptoms. Changes in parent-child conflict and changes in social and family contacts due to the pandemic were also measured. Logistic regression models revealed that greater increases in conflict significantly predicted the presence of youth somatic symptoms (OR = 0.52, 95% CI= [0.27, 1.00]. Unexpectedly, total familism did not significantly moderate the relation between change in parent-child conflict and the presence of somatic symptoms (RR = 1.16, 95% CI= [0.99, 1.36]. However, post hoc analyses revealed that parental familism support was the only dimension of familism that was directly associated with the count of child somatic symptoms (RR= 0.81, 95% Confidence Interval [CI]= 0.71, 0.93). Parental familism as a referent significantly moderated the relation between change in parent-child conflict and the count of somatic symptoms (RR= 1.19, 95% CI = [1.01, 1.41]), such that higher familism values strengthened the positive relationship of change in parent-child conflict and higher count of somatic symptoms. Findings emphasize the need for future longitudinal research, considering medical conditions, to understand how parental familism values, particularly support, may buffer against somatic symptoms for Latinx youth.
Date Created
2024
Agent

Multi-Camera Bird-Eye-View Occupancy Detection for Intelligent Transportation System

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Description
3D perception poses a significant challenge in Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) due to occlusion and limited field of view. The necessity for real-time processing and alignment with existing traffic infrastructure compounds these limitations. To counter these issues, this work introduces

3D perception poses a significant challenge in Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) due to occlusion and limited field of view. The necessity for real-time processing and alignment with existing traffic infrastructure compounds these limitations. To counter these issues, this work introduces a novel multi-camera Bird-Eye View (BEV) occupancy detection framework. This approach leverages multi-camera setups to overcome occlusion and field-of-view limitations while employing BEV occupancy to simplify the 3D perception task, ensuring critical information is retained. A noble dataset for BEV Occupancy detection, encompassing diverse scenes and varying camera configurations, was created using the CARLA simulator. Subsequent extensive evaluation of various Multiview occupancy detection models showcased the critical roles of scene diversity and occupancy grid resolution in enhancing model performance. A structured framework that complements the generated data is proposed for data collection in the real world. The trained model is validated against real-world conditions to ensure its practical application, demonstrating the influence of robust dataset design in refining ITS perception systems. This contributes to significant advancements in traffic management, safety, and operational efficiency.
Date Created
2024
Agent

JEDAI.Ed: An Interactive Explainable AI Platform for Outreach with Robotics Programming

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Description
While the growing prevalence of robots in industry and daily life necessitatesknowing how to operate them safely and effectively, the steep learning curve of programming languages and formal AI education is a barrier for most beginner users. This thesis presents an interactive

While the growing prevalence of robots in industry and daily life necessitatesknowing how to operate them safely and effectively, the steep learning curve of programming languages and formal AI education is a barrier for most beginner users. This thesis presents an interactive platform which leverages a block based programming interface with natural language instructions to teach robotics programming to novice users. An integrated robot simulator allows users to view the execution of their high-level plan, with the hierarchical low level planning abstracted away from them. Users are provided human-understandable explanations of their planning failures and hints using LLMs to enhance the learning process. The results obtained from a user study conducted with students having minimal programming experience show that JEDAI-Ed is successful in teaching robotic planning to users, as well as increasing their curiosity about AI in general.
Date Created
2024
Agent

An Evaluation of the Current Relationship Between Genetic Counselors and Palliative Oncology Providers at Mayo Clinic

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Description
Introduction: There is growing evidence to suggest that the integration of genomics into the palliative oncology setting is not only critical for the identification of individuals who may be at increased familial risk; but that it is also a key

Introduction: There is growing evidence to suggest that the integration of genomics into the palliative oncology setting is not only critical for the identification of individuals who may be at increased familial risk; but that it is also a key component of providing family centered care - a concept at the heart of both genetic counseling and palliative care alike. Barriers to this integration have been well described, and some strides have been made in describing the current genetic practices and policies within palliative oncology. However, most of this research has been in the form of broad literature reviews performed outside of the United States. Methods: To better describe regional genetics-palliative practices, an online, qualitative survey was distributed to both cancer genetic counselors and palliative oncology providers at four of the US Mayo Clinic locations. The survey was used to illuminate the current processes, policies, and relationships between the groups; as well as to identify potential improvements. Results: Responses were received from 15 MD/DOs, 9 PAs, 16 NPs, 27 RNs, 4 GCs, and 8 “Others,” of which 54.4% worked primarily in hematology & oncology, 35.4% in palliative care, and 6.3% in genetic counseling. 89% of palliative care providers and 62% of oncology providers reported never or only once yearly referring patients for genetic counseling; citing that they were (1) unaware of genetic counseling resources or referral processes, (2) uncertain on how genetic testing would influence patients’ medical management, and (3) felt it was out of their scope of practice. Similarly, each genetic counselor that responded reported never or once yearly receiving referrals from palliative care. Conclusion: While additional, larger studies are required to most accurately represent the practices of genetic counselors and palliative oncology providers at the Mayo Clinic, this study suggests that providers across all specialties surveyed would find additional resources for referring patients to both palliative care and genetic counseling to be useful. Thus, future efforts could be directed towards educating palliative oncology providers on the role of genetic counselors, as well as educating genetic counselors on the role of palliative care.
Date Created
2024
Agent

An Approximate Dynamic Programming Framework for Occlusion-Robust Multi-Object Tracking

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Description
In this work, the problem of multi-object tracking (MOT) is studied, particularly the challenges that arise from object occlusions. A solution based on a principled approximate dynamic programming approach called ADPTrack is presented. ADPTrack relies on existing MOT solutions and

In this work, the problem of multi-object tracking (MOT) is studied, particularly the challenges that arise from object occlusions. A solution based on a principled approximate dynamic programming approach called ADPTrack is presented. ADPTrack relies on existing MOT solutions and directly improves them. When matching tracks to objects at a particular frame, the proposed approach simulates executions of these existing solutions into future frames to obtain approximate track extensions, from which a comparison of past and future appearance feature information is leveraged to improve overall robustness to occlusion-based error. The proposed solution when applied to the renowned MOT17 dataset empirically demonstrates a 0.7% improvement in the association accuracy (IDF1 metric) over a state-of-the-art baseline that it builds upon while obtaining minor improvements with respect to all other metrics. Moreover, it is shown that this improvement is even more pronounced in scenarios where the camera maintains a fixed position. This implies that the proposed method is effective in addressing MOT issues pertaining to object occlusions.
Date Created
2024
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