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Conceptual models for Describing Virtual Worlds


François Bernier, Éric Boivin, Denis Laurendeau, Marielle Mokhtari and François Lemieux


Abstract - A conceptual model of a virtual world is a high-level representation of how the objects behave and how they are related to each other. The conceptual models identify the most essential elements of the reality to be simulated. This is the first and a very important step in the process of designing a virtual world. Afterwards, specific and complex models can be implemented and inserted into these conceptual models. This paper provides an overview of existing conceptual models used to design virtual worlds. A number of existing frameworks and architecture for describing virtual worlds are classified into six kinds of conceptual models: unstructured, graphic-oriented, network-oriented, object-oriented, environment-oriented and relational graph-oriented representations. The advantages and issues regarding virtual world design, management, reusability and interoperability are discussed.



Bibtex:

@inproceedings{Bernier495,
    author    = { François Bernier and Éric Boivin and Denis Laurendeau and Marielle Mokhtari and François Lemieux },
    title     = { Conceptual models for Describing Virtual Worlds },
    booktitle = { Proc. of the 12-th International Conference in Central Europe on Computer Graphics, Visualization and Computer Vision (WSCG'04) },
    pages     = { 25-33 },
    year      = { 2004 },
    month     = { February 2-6 },
    keywords  = { Virtual World, Conceptual Model, Reusability, Modularity, Extensibility },
    location  = { Plzen, Czech Republic }
}

Dernière modification: 2004/11/16 par eboivin

     
   
   

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