Biblio
Users' QoE (Quality of Experience) in Multi-sensorial, Immersive, Collaborative Environments (MICE) applications is mostly measured by psychometric studies. These studies provide a subjective insight into the performance of such applications. In this paper, we hypothesize that spatial coherence or the lack of it of the embedded virtual objects among users has a correlation to the QoE in MICE. We use Position Discrepancy (PD) to model this lack of spatial coherence in MICE. Based on that, we propose a Hierarchical Position Discrepancy Model (HPDM) that computes PD at multiple levels to derive the application/system-level PD as a measure of performance.; AB@Experimental results on an example task in MICE show that HPDM can objectively quantify the application performance and has a correlation to the psychometric study-based QoE measurements. We envisage HPDM can provide more insight on the MICE application without the need for extensive user study.