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Atelier à la conférence IHM 2025 : RA Permanente

Maxime Cauz, Thibaut Septon, Elise Hallaert, Theo Leclercq, Bruno Dumas, Charles Bailly, Clement Tyminski, Matias Peraza, Sophie Lepreux, Emmanuel Dubois

TL;DR

This paper reports on a workshop at IHM'25 exploring the feasibility and challenges of permanent augmented reality (PAR) for everyday life. It documents a structured process where organizer-led visions are contrasted with scenario-based discussions and a WAAD-based analysis to derive thematic categories. The contributions include a taxonomy of future PAR research areas, identification of adoption barriers, and an emphasis on consent, privacy, and governance as central to responsible deployment. The findings highlight ethical, environmental, and societal dimensions of PAR and underscore the need for safeguards and inclusive design to guide future research and practice.

Abstract

As we move towards more ubiquitous computing, the concept of pervasive augmented reality (PAR) could lead to a major evolution in the relationship between humans, computing and the world. The experience of a continuously augmented world can have both benefits and undesirable consequences for users' lives, and raises many questions in multiple areas. In this workshop, we wanted to bring together all IHM'25 conference participants who are concerned or enthusiastic about discussing this topic. The aim was to draw on collective intelligence to identify the interdisciplinary challenges that remain to be resolved in order to enable the implementation of these technologies in everyday life, but also to define the necessary safeguards. Is PAR too techno-enthusiastic? All of these elements were grouped into categories to define a set of future major areas of research around permanent augmented reality. This document is in French as the conference is a French-speaking international conference.

Atelier à la conférence IHM 2025 : RA Permanente

TL;DR

This paper reports on a workshop at IHM'25 exploring the feasibility and challenges of permanent augmented reality (PAR) for everyday life. It documents a structured process where organizer-led visions are contrasted with scenario-based discussions and a WAAD-based analysis to derive thematic categories. The contributions include a taxonomy of future PAR research areas, identification of adoption barriers, and an emphasis on consent, privacy, and governance as central to responsible deployment. The findings highlight ethical, environmental, and societal dimensions of PAR and underscore the need for safeguards and inclusive design to guide future research and practice.

Abstract

As we move towards more ubiquitous computing, the concept of pervasive augmented reality (PAR) could lead to a major evolution in the relationship between humans, computing and the world. The experience of a continuously augmented world can have both benefits and undesirable consequences for users' lives, and raises many questions in multiple areas. In this workshop, we wanted to bring together all IHM'25 conference participants who are concerned or enthusiastic about discussing this topic. The aim was to draw on collective intelligence to identify the interdisciplinary challenges that remain to be resolved in order to enable the implementation of these technologies in everyday life, but also to define the necessary safeguards. Is PAR too techno-enthusiastic? All of these elements were grouped into categories to define a set of future major areas of research around permanent augmented reality. This document is in French as the conference is a French-speaking international conference.
Paper Structure (9 sections, 1 figure)

This paper contains 9 sections, 1 figure.

Figures (1)

  • Figure 1: Diagramme d'affinité d'activités de travail (WAAD) réalisé lors du workshop et résumé en section \ref{['sec:waad']}.