The review of the existing systems for performing manufacturing tasks in a collaborative virtual environment highlights the limitations for modeling object behavioral characteristics. It is difficult for users to describe the tasks to be performed in the environment. A behavioral layer architecture is presented here to address these limitations. The layer consists of a virtual manufacturing lattice (VML) structure, an object library, and a virtual manufacturing script (VMS). The VML is a hierarchical structure to encapsulate object behavioral characteristics, which augments the scenegraph structure. The encapsulation is achieved by using a four-tuple structure hC; R; T ; Ei, where C is the composition structure of the node which contains geometry, material, texture, and location data, R is the precedence relationship element, T is the trajectory relationship element, and E is the event control list used to describe the state information about the object. The VMS is implemented as a script and a parser that serves as an interface between the user and collaborative virtual reality software. The script is a grammar-like structure to describe manufacturing tasks. In the behavioral layer architecture, the script is parsed, and calls are issued to the underlying functions to initiate the tasks and to manipulate the lattice structure to perform the specified tasks. Availability of network bandwidth is a key ingredient for using our system for telecollaboration. As part of an example to demonstrate the implementation of VML-VMS, a study of network latency and saturation is performed for different network medium, packet sizes, sampling rate, and network protocols to explore ways of reducing network latency and display frame jitter.Index Terms-Collaborative virtual environment, object behavior modeling, virtual manufacturing.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.