| William Buxton, Ralph Hill, and Peter Rowley. Issues and techniques in touch-sensitive tablet input. In Proceedings of SIGGRAPH '85, pages 215--224, New York, NY, USA, 1985. ACM Press. |
....as well [14] Its extension, using barcode tagging offers a general mechanism for interaction that is related to physical objects [12] In contrast to our work the interface is a device that the user carries along rather than a direct interaction opportunity within the environment. In [4], issues and techniques that are relevant in the process of designing touch sensitive input devices are presented. A comprehensive directory of input devices is also maintained at [3] by the same author. Load cells and force sensing has been used in a number of projects where ground reaction ....
Buxton, W., Hill, R. and Rowley, P., Issues and Techniques in Touch-Sensitive Tablet Input in Proceedings of Siggraph '85 (July 22-26, San Francisco), ACM/Siggraph, 1985, pp. 215-224
.... As a thought experiment, one can imagine using a single hand to move the plate tool relative to a doll s head mounted on a pivot (or a similar mechanical assemblage, such a set of gimbal rings) This would be analogous to using one hand on a tablet fitted with a physical template, which works well [30]. But the current experimental data suggest that the dynamic role of the nonpreferred hand also led to a cognitive performance benefit in terms of task strategy chosen. The task syntax supported by moving one hand relative to a reference object on a pivot is quite similar to that required by this ....
Buxton, W., Hill, R., Rowley, P., "Issues and Techniques in Touch-Sensitive Tablet Input," Computer Graphics, July 1985, pp. 215-224.
.... of actual users to evaluate interface design [6:216] Buxton discusses the need to associate kinesthetic connectivity to conceptual connectivity in input system design [19] With Hill and Rowley, he developed a primitive paint program to illustrate the possibilities of touch based interfaces [22]. A plethora of commercial pen based systems has flooded the market in the past four years. The results has been modest at best. The PenPoint system from GO was one of the first. It is not only a pen based user interface, but a full object oriented, pre emptive multitasking operating system [54] ....
Buxton, William A. S., Ralph Hill, and Peter Rowley. Issues and Techniques in Touch-Sensitive Tablet Input. Proceedings of Siggraph `85. San Francisco: ACM, 1985. 215-224.
....give no special treatment to devices that operate via touch. These taxonomies do not suggest examples of touchsensing positioning devices other than the aforementioned touchpad, touchscreen, and touch tablet. Buxton, Hill, and Rowley provide an insightful analysis of touch sensitive tablet input [4], pointing out that touch tablets can sense a pair of signals that a traditional mouse cannot: Touch and Release. The present paper demonstrates that multiple pairs of such signals, in the form of touch sensors, can be applied to the mouse and other devices. For the case of the mouse, we have ....
.... car seat (weight sensor for airbags) motion detectors electro magnetic field sensor [11] Light level sensor Sidewinder forcefeedback joystick (IR beam sensor) TouchMouse TouchCube [12] Psychic Space floor tiles [13] contact area (e.g. some touchpads touchscreens) pressure sensitive touch tablet [4] vector input touchscreen [9] torque sensor isometric joystick laser rangefinder stud finder Multi touch tablet w pressure [15] pressure sensors on handhelds [7] Haptic lens (deformation at multiple points) 22] HoloWall [17] Field sensing devices [23] 25] Table 1 Classification of touch sensing ....
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Buxton, W., Hill, R., Rowley, P., "Issues and Techniques in Touch-Sensitive Tablet Input," Computer Graphics, 19 (3): p. 215-224, 1985.
....for the puck: State 0 State 1 Puck On Tablet Puck Off Tablet State 2 Button Down Button Up OUT OF RANGE TRACKING DRAGGING Fig. 3 State transitions for the puck on the Wacom tablet. By comparison, the touchpad senses only states 0 and 1, while a standard mouse senses only states 1 and 2 [4][6], as shown in Fig. 4: Button Down Button Up State 1 State 2 Mouse Touch Release State 0 State 1 Touchpad OUT OF RANGE TRACKING TRACKING DRAGGING Fig. 4 State models for a touchpad (left) and a standard mouse (right) In principle, a dragging state (state 2) can be introduced for the ....
Buxton, W., Hill, R., Rowley, P., "Issues and Techniques in Touch-Sensitive Tablet Input," Computer Graphics, 19 (3): p. 215-224, 1985.
No context found.
William Buxton, Ralph Hill, and Peter Rowley. Issues and techniques in touch-sensitive tablet input. In Proceedings of SIGGRAPH '85, pages 215--224, New York, NY, USA, 1985. ACM Press.
No context found.
Buxton, W., Hill, R., & Rowley, P. (1985). Issues and techniques in touch sensitive tablet input. ACM SIGGRAPH. p. 215-223.
No context found.
Buxton, W., Hill, R., & Rowley, P. (1985). Issues and techniques in touch sensitive tablet input. ACM SIGGRAPH. p. 215-223.
No context found.
Buxton, W., Hill, R. and Rowley, P., Issues and Techniques in Touch-Sensitive Tablet Input in Proceedings of Siggraph '85 (July 22-26, San Francisco), ACM/Siggraph, 1985, pp. 215--224.
No context found.
Buxton, W., Hill, R., & Rowley, P. (1985). Issues and techniques in touch sensitive tablet input. ACM SIGGRAPH. p. 215-223.
No context found.
William Buxton, Ralph Hill, and Peter Rowley. Issues and techniques in touch-sensitive tablet input. In Proceedings of SIGGRAPH '85, pages 215--224, New York, NY, USA, 1985. ACM Press.
No context found.
Buxton, W., Hill, R. and Rowley, P., Issues and Techniques in Touch-Sensitive Tablet Input in Proceedings of Siggraph '85 (July 22-26, San Francisco), ACM/Siggraph, 1985, pp. 215--224.
No context found.
Buxton, W., Hill, R., Rowley, P. Issues and techniques in touch-sensitive tablet input. Computer Graphics 19 (3), 1985, 215-223.
No context found.
W. Buxton, R. Hill, and P. Rowley. Issues and techniques in touchsensitive tablet input, Proc. SIGGRAPH '85, 215-223.
No context found.
- Buxton W., Hill R., Rowley P., Issues and techniques in touch-sensitive tablet input. University of Toronto, 1985.
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