Wrist-worn pervasive gaze interaction

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

Wrist-worn pervasive gaze interaction. / Hansen, John Paulin; Lund, Haakon; Biermann, Florian; Møllenbach, Emilie; Sztuk, Sebastian; San Augustin, javier .

ETRA '16: Proceedings of the symposium on eye tracking research and applications. ACM, 2016. p. 57-64.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hansen, JP, Lund, H, Biermann, F, Møllenbach, E, Sztuk, S & San Augustin, J 2016, Wrist-worn pervasive gaze interaction. in ETRA '16: Proceedings of the symposium on eye tracking research and applications. ACM, pp. 57-64. https://doi.org/10.1145/2857491.2857514

APA

Hansen, J. P., Lund, H., Biermann, F., Møllenbach, E., Sztuk, S., & San Augustin, J. (2016). Wrist-worn pervasive gaze interaction. In ETRA '16: Proceedings of the symposium on eye tracking research and applications (pp. 57-64). ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/2857491.2857514

Vancouver

Hansen JP, Lund H, Biermann F, Møllenbach E, Sztuk S, San Augustin J. Wrist-worn pervasive gaze interaction. In ETRA '16: Proceedings of the symposium on eye tracking research and applications. ACM. 2016. p. 57-64 https://doi.org/10.1145/2857491.2857514

Author

Hansen, John Paulin ; Lund, Haakon ; Biermann, Florian ; Møllenbach, Emilie ; Sztuk, Sebastian ; San Augustin, javier . / Wrist-worn pervasive gaze interaction. ETRA '16: Proceedings of the symposium on eye tracking research and applications. ACM, 2016. pp. 57-64

Bibtex

@inproceedings{ba0da6e9d4744b79965523d53a0f0669,
title = "Wrist-worn pervasive gaze interaction",
abstract = "This paper addresses gaze interaction for smart home control, conducted from a wrist-worn unit. First we asked ten people to enact the gaze movements they would propose for e.g. opening a door or adjusting the room temperature. On basis of their suggestions we built and tested different versions of a prototype applying off-screen stroke input. Command prompts were given to twenty participants by text or arrow displays. The success rate achieved by the end of their first encounter with the system was 46% in average; it took them 1.28 seconds to connect with the system and 1.29 seconds to make a correct selection. Their subjective evaluations were positive with regard to the speed of the interaction. We conclude that gaze gesture input seems feasible for fast and brief remote control of smart home technology provided that robustness of tracking is improved.",
author = "Hansen, {John Paulin} and Haakon Lund and Florian Biermann and Emilie M{\o}llenbach and Sebastian Sztuk and {San Augustin}, javier",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1145/2857491.2857514",
language = "English",
pages = "57--64",
booktitle = "ETRA '16",
publisher = "ACM",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Wrist-worn pervasive gaze interaction

AU - Hansen, John Paulin

AU - Lund, Haakon

AU - Biermann, Florian

AU - Møllenbach, Emilie

AU - Sztuk, Sebastian

AU - San Augustin, javier

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - This paper addresses gaze interaction for smart home control, conducted from a wrist-worn unit. First we asked ten people to enact the gaze movements they would propose for e.g. opening a door or adjusting the room temperature. On basis of their suggestions we built and tested different versions of a prototype applying off-screen stroke input. Command prompts were given to twenty participants by text or arrow displays. The success rate achieved by the end of their first encounter with the system was 46% in average; it took them 1.28 seconds to connect with the system and 1.29 seconds to make a correct selection. Their subjective evaluations were positive with regard to the speed of the interaction. We conclude that gaze gesture input seems feasible for fast and brief remote control of smart home technology provided that robustness of tracking is improved.

AB - This paper addresses gaze interaction for smart home control, conducted from a wrist-worn unit. First we asked ten people to enact the gaze movements they would propose for e.g. opening a door or adjusting the room temperature. On basis of their suggestions we built and tested different versions of a prototype applying off-screen stroke input. Command prompts were given to twenty participants by text or arrow displays. The success rate achieved by the end of their first encounter with the system was 46% in average; it took them 1.28 seconds to connect with the system and 1.29 seconds to make a correct selection. Their subjective evaluations were positive with regard to the speed of the interaction. We conclude that gaze gesture input seems feasible for fast and brief remote control of smart home technology provided that robustness of tracking is improved.

U2 - 10.1145/2857491.2857514

DO - 10.1145/2857491.2857514

M3 - Article in proceedings

SP - 57

EP - 64

BT - ETRA '16

PB - ACM

ER -

ID: 155834027