Frontiers in Virtual Reality (Nov 2021)

Telelife: The Future of Remote Living

  • Jason Orlosky,
  • Jason Orlosky,
  • Misha Sra,
  • Kenan Bektaş,
  • Huaishu Peng,
  • Jeeeun Kim,
  • Nataliya Kos’myna,
  • Tobias Höllerer,
  • Anthony Steed,
  • Kiyoshi Kiyokawa,
  • Kaan Akşit

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/frvir.2021.763340
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2

Abstract

Read online

In recent years, everyday activities such as work and socialization have steadily shifted to more remote and virtual settings. With the COVID-19 pandemic, the switch from physical to virtual has been accelerated, which has substantially affected almost all aspects of our lives, including business, education, commerce, healthcare, and personal life. This rapid and large-scale switch from in-person to remote interactions has exacerbated the fact that our current technologies lack functionality and are limited in their ability to recreate interpersonal interactions. To help address these limitations in the future, we introduce “Telelife,” a vision for the near and far future that depicts the potential means to improve remote living and better align it with how we interact, live and work in the physical world. Telelife encompasses novel synergies of technologies and concepts such as digital twins, virtual/physical rapid prototyping, and attention and context-aware user interfaces with innovative hardware that can support ultrarealistic graphics and haptic feedback, user state detection, and more. These ideas will guide the transformation of our daily lives and routines soon, targeting the year 2035. In addition, we identify opportunities across high-impact applications in domains related to this vision of Telelife. Along with a recent survey of relevant fields such as human-computer interaction, pervasive computing, and virtual reality, we provide a meta-synthesis in this paper that will guide future research on remote living.

Keywords