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- articleSeptember 2016
Nomadic Input on Mobile Devices: The Influence of Touch Input Technique and Walking Speed on Performance and Offset Modeling
Human-Computer Interaction (HUMCI), Volume 31, Issue 5Pages 420–471https://doi.org/10.1080/07370024.2015.1071195In everyday life, people use their mobile phones on-the-go with different walking speeds and with different touch input techniques. Unfortunately, much of the published research in mobile interaction does not quantify the influence of these variables. ...
- chapterOctober 2015
- chapterOctober 2015
Title page
ICAT '15: Proceedings of the 2015 XXV International Conference on Information, Communication and Automation Technologies (ICAT)Page 1https://doi.org/10.1109/ICAT.2015.7340494The problem of detecting objects and their movements in sensor data is of crucial importance in providing safe navigation through both indoor and outdoor environments for the visually impaired. In our setting we use depth-sensor data obtained from a ...
- research-articleSeptember 2010
Virtual hooping: teaching a phone about hula-hooping for fitness, fun and rehabilitation
MobileHCI '10: Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Human computer interaction with mobile devices and servicesPages 309–312https://doi.org/10.1145/1851600.1851654The paper demonstrates the feasibility of using mobile phones for fitness and rehabilitation purposes by training them to recognise a user's hula-hooping movements. It also proposes several parameters which can be used as a measure of rhythmic movement ...
- ArticleSeptember 2009
Measuring throughput of the headjoystick human-computer interface
SMO'09: Proceedings of the 9th WSEAS international conference on Simulation, modelling and optimizationPages 112–117In the paper human-computer interface device for the disabled is presented. It uses commercially available inertial sensor pack to obtain reliable 3D orientation measurements of the subject's head which are transformed into control signals and can then ...
- articleSeptember 2009
Experimental measurement of information transfer rate of the inertial sensor based human-computer interface for the disabled
WSEAS TRANSACTIONS on SYSTEMS (WSTOS), Volume 8, Issue 9Pages 1072–1082The paper presents inertial sensor based human-computer interface for the disabled. The device uses commercially available inertial sensor pack to reliably measure 3D head orientation (via Kalman filtering of accelerometer, gyroscope and magnetometer ...
- articleApril 2009
Testing inertial sensor performance as hands-free human-computer interface
The paper introduces hands-free human-computer interface designed around commercially available inertial sensor pack. It is primarily intended to provide computer access for people with little or no upper-limb functionality, but can be used by able ...
- ArticleMarch 2009
An evaluation of inertial sensor based pointing device using multidirectional point-and-select task
ICAI'09: Proceedings of the 10th WSEAS international conference on Automation & informationPages 163–168In the paper we propose a novel hands-free pointing device for the disabled based on commercially available inertial sensors (XSens MTx) and evaluate its performance on twelve test subjects using multi-directional point-and-select task and experimental ...
- articleMarch 2008
Human body model based inertial measurement of sit-to-stand motion kinematics
In the paper a method for measuring kinematics of sit-to-stand motion using inertial sensors and human body model is presented. The proposed method fuses data from inertial sensors and data from three-segment human body model using Extended Kalman ...