Ingvar Gustavsson
Blekinge Institute of Technology
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ingvar Gustavsson.
IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies | 2013
Mohamed Tawfik; Elio Sancristobal; Sergio Martin; Rosario Gil; Gabriel Diaz; Antonio Colmenar; Juan Peire; Manuel Castro; Kristian Nilsson; Johan Zackrisson; Lars H ; xE; kansson; Ingvar Gustavsson
This paper reports on a state-of-the-art remote laboratory project called Virtual Instrument Systems in Reality (VISIR). VISIR allows wiring and measuring of electronic circuits remotely on a virtual workbench that replicates physical circuit breadboards. The wiring mechanism is developed by means of a relay switching matrix connected to a PCI eXtensions for Instrumentation (PXI) instrumentation platform. The entire equipment is controlled by LabVIEW server software, in addition to a measurement server software that protects the equipment from hazard connections by verifying input circuit designs, sent by students, before being executed. This paper addresses other approaches such as remote labs based on Data Acquisition Cards (DAQs), NetLab, and RemotElectLab, comparing them with VISIR in order to emphasize its singularity. Topics discussed are as follows: the technical description, software, operation cycle, features, and provided services. In addition, the feedback received by students at several universities and the encountered drawbacks along with the proposed solutions are highlighted. The paper finally addresses the ongoing and future challenges within the VISIR community including its integration with Learning Management Systems (LMSs) and iLab Shared Architecture (ISA), its new hardware version release that is based on LAN eXtensions for Instrumentation (LXI), and its new open platform version that supports federated access.
global engineering education conference | 2011
Gustavo R. Alves; Maria A. Marques; Clara Viegas; M. C. Costa Lobo; R. G. Barral; Rubem Couto; F. L. Jacob; C. A. Ramos; G. M. Vilão; D. S. Covita; Joaquim A. Alves; P. S. Guimarães; Ingvar Gustavsson
The use of remote labs in undergraduate courses has been reported in literature several times since the mid 90s. Nevertheless, very few articles present results about the learning gains obtained by students using them, especially with a large number of students, thus suggesting a lack of data concerning their pedagogical effectiveness. This paper addresses such a gap by presenting some preliminary results concerning the use of a remote laboratory, known as VISIR, in a large undergraduate course on Applied Physics, with over 500 students enrolled.
ieee international caracas conference on devices circuits and systems | 2002
Ingvar Gustavsson
A remote or online laboratory is a laboratory where one can access experiments and instruments or other equipment from outside over the Internet. Laboratories for undergraduate education or vocational training in basic electrical engineering are easy to control remotely. One cannot see or hear the electrical current, so there is no need for sound or video transmission. Computer-based instruments do not have any control buttons or displays on the front panel. They have virtual front panels on the host computer only and those panels can be moved to a remote computer screen. However, the manual forming of circuits and connecting of test probes cannot be transferred. These actions must be performed in another way in a remote laboratory. Remotely controllable switch matrices must be used. In the remote laboratory at BTH (Blekinge Institute of Technology) a client/server architecture is used. The student makes all the settings wanted on the client computer and then sends them to a lab server. The server makes measurements requested and returns the data obtained. The whole procedure takes only a second or two. A number of clients can access the experiments simultaneously. The laboratory is used in ordinary courses for on-campus students. They access the laboratory from a computer hall or from elsewhere outside the university. Due to the low number of bytes transferred, a 56 kbit modem is sufficient.
IEEE Transactions on Education | 2014
Maria A. Marques; Maria C. Viegas; Maria C. Costa-Lobo; André V. Fidalgo; Gustavo R. Alves; Joao S. Rocha; Ingvar Gustavsson
As technology is increasingly being seen as a facilitator to learning, open remote laboratories are increasingly available and in widespread use around the world. They provide some advantages over traditional hands-on labs or simulations. This paper presents the results of integrating the open remote laboratory VISIR into several courses, in various contexts and using various methodologies. These integrations, all related to higher education engineering, were designed by teachers with different perspectives to achieve a range of learning outcomes. The degree to which these VISIR-related outcomes were accomplished is discussed. The results reflect the levels of student engagement and learning and of teacher involvement. From the analysis, a connection between these two aspects was traced, although only related to the user profiles. VISIR is shown to be always of benefit for more motivated students, but this benefit can be maximized under particular conditions and characteristics.
international conference on remote engineering and virtual instrumentation | 2012
André V. Fidalgo; Gustavo R. Alves; Maria A. Marques; Maria C. Viegas; Maria C. Costa-Lobo; Unai Hernandez; Javier Garcia-Zubia; Ingvar Gustavsson
Remote Laboratories are an emergent technological and pedagogical tool at all education levels, and their widespread use is an important part of their own improvement and evolution. This paper describes several issues encountered on laboratorial classes, on higher education courses, when using remote laboratories based on PXI systems, either using the VISIR system or an alternate in-house solution. Three main issues are presented and explained, all reported by teachers that gave support to students use of remote laboratories. The first issue deals with the need to allow students to select the actual place where an ammeter is to be inserted on electric circuits, even incorrectly, therefore emulating real world difficulties. The second one deals with problems with timing when several measurements are required at short intervals, as in the discharge cycle of a capacitor. And the last issue deals with the use of a multimeter in DC mode when reading AC values, a use that collides with the lab settings. All scenarios are presented and discussed including the solution found for each case. The conclusion derived from the described work is that the remote laboratories area is an expanding field, where practical use leads to improvement and evolution of the available solutions, requiring a strict cooperation and information sharing between all actors, i.e. developers, teachers and students.
global engineering education conference | 2011
Danilo Garbi Zutin; Michael E. Auer; Ingvar Gustavsson
This paper describes the work done at the Carinthia University of Applied Sciences towards integrating VISIR-based labs on the iLab architecture. The Virtual Systems in Reality (VISIR) project is carried out by the Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden and features a platform for performing experiments in different domains.
2016 2nd International Conference of the Portuguese Society for Engineering Education (CISPEE) | 2016
Gustavo R. Alves; André V. Fidalgo; Arcelina Marques; Clara Viegas; Manuel C. Felgueiras; Ricardo J. Costa; Natércia Lima; Manuel Castro; Gabriel Díaz-Orueta; Elio Sancristobal Ruiz; Felix Garcia-Loro; Javier Garcia-Zubia; Unai Hernandez-Jayo; Wlodek Kulesza; Ingvar Gustavsson; Andreas Pester; Danilo Garbi Zutin; Luis Schlichting; Golberi de Salvador Ferreira; Daniel Dezan de Bona; Juarez Bento da Silva; João Bosco da Mota Alves; Simone Meister Sommer Bilessimo; Ana M. B. Pavani; Delberis A. Lima; Guilherme P. Temporão; Susana Marchisio; Sonia Beatriz Concari; Federico Lerro; Ruben Fernandez
Experiments have been at the heart of scientific development and education for centuries. From the outburst of Information and Communication Technologies, virtual and remote labs have added to hands-on labs a new conception of practical experience, especially in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics education. This paper aims at describing the features of a remote lab named Virtual Instruments System in Reality, embedded in a community of practice and forming the spearhead of a federation of remote labs. More particularly, it discusses the advantages and disadvantages of remote labs over virtual labs as regards to scalability constraints and development and maintenance costs. Finally, it describes an actual implementation in an international community of practice of engineering schools forming the embryo of a first world wide federation of Virtual Instruments System in Reality nodes, under the framework of a project funded by the Erasmus+ Program.
frontiers in education conference | 2011
M. C. Costa Lobo; Gustavo R. Alves; Maria A. Marques; Clara Viegas; R. G. Barral; Ruben Couto; F. L. Jacob; Carlos Ramos; G. M. Vilao; D. S. Covita; Joaquim A. Alves; Pedro Guimarães; Ingvar Gustavsson
The use of remote labs in undergraduate courses has been reported in literature several times since the mid 90s. Nevertheless, very few articles present results about the correspondent learning gains obtained by students, and in what conditions those systems can be more efficient, thus suggesting a lack of data concerning their pedagogical effectiveness. This paper addresses such a gap by presenting some initial findings concerning the use of a remote lab (VISIR), in a large undergraduate course on Physics, with over 550 students enrolled.
IEEE Transactions on Education | 2017
Javier Garcia-Zubia; Jordi Cuadros; Susana Romero; Unai Hernandez-Jayo; Pablo Orduña; Mariluz Guenaga; Lucinio González-Sabaté; Ingvar Gustavsson
Remote laboratories give students the opportunity of experimenting in STEM by using the Internet to control and measure an experimental setting. Remote laboratories are increasingly used in the classroom to complement, or substitute for, hands-on laboratories, so it is important to know its learning value. While many authors approach this question through qualitative analyses, this paper reports a replicated quantitative study that evaluates the teaching performance of one of these resources, the virtual instrument systems in reality (VISIR) remote laboratory. VISIR, described here, is the most popular remote laboratory for basic analog electronics. This paper hypothesizes that use of a remote laboratory has a positive effect on students’ learning process. This report analyzes the effect of the use of VISIR in five different groups of students from two different academic years (2013–2014 and 2014–2015), with three teachers and at two educational levels. The empirical experience focuses on Ohm’s Law. The results obtained are reported using a pretest and post-test design. The tests were carefully designed and analyzed, and their reliability and validity were assessed. The analysis of knowledge test question results shows that the post-test scores are higher that the pretest. The difference is significant according to Wilcoxon test (
global engineering education conference | 2014
Salaheddin Odeh; Gustavo R. Alves; Mahasen Anabtawi; Mahran Jazi; Mahmoud R. Arekat; Ingvar Gustavsson
{p} <0.001