| K. Hinckley, J. Pierce, M. Sinclair, and E. Horvitz. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In UIST '00: Proceedings of the 13th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology, pages 91--100, New York, NY, USA, 2000. ACM Press. |
....gestures to express approximate amounts, which leads us to believe that it is reasonable to utilise proximity as an input method. The IR receiver transmitter pair, which is used for proximity measurements, can be assembled either on top or underneath the PDA. Often, the top side is chosen (e.g. [6]) which means that in order to zoom the user has to move the device closer or farther to one s face. This will amplify the zooming effect, since the screen appears bigger when moved closer even without zooming. We decided to place the sensor underneath the device and use the hand not holding the ....
K. Hinckley, J. Pierce, M. Sinclair, and E. Horvitz, "Sensing Techniques for Mobile Interaction," presented at UIST 2000.
....shopper is currently seeing (location context) The device can also recommend sales items that match users interests without any explicit user instructions (personal context) 1. 2 Problems in Context Aware Computing Although many context aware systems have been developed in the past few years [1, 4, 10, 11, 14, 6, 26, 27, 33, 42], the functions of these systems remain to be primitive [12] because building context aware systems are often di#cult and costly. In this section, I will describe three key problems that often arise when building context aware systems: 1) lack of reusable context aware mechanisms, 2) limited ....
....interpretation of the acquired information. Because of lacking reusable context sensing and reasoning mechanisms, many of the existing context aware systems are di#cult and costly to build. Context sensing, or acquiring information from the physical environment, usually involves hardware sensors [1, 10, 27]. In a dynamic environment, a great amount of hardware sensors are required for agents to acquire a wide divergence of information. Although with the advent of technology the cost of hardware sensors has been decreasing, attaching a large amount of context sensors with individual agents remains to ....
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Ken Hinckley, Je#rey S. Pierce, Mike Sinclair, and Eric Horvitz. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In UIST, pages 91--100, 2000.
.... bulldozer navigation metaphor [8] They do not require direct reference to points on the display, which is difficult with eyeglass mounted wearable displays. We have also employed a tilt sensor in two of our 3D navigation methods. Tilt sensors have been used with small screen devices and PDA s [4]. However, tiltable display interface techniques are not amenable to eyeglass mounted wearable displays. EVALUATION Our first interface uses a bulldozer metaphor, which requires coordinated input from both hands to initiate movement. The second interface uses an airplane metaphor. The right ....
K. Hinckley, J.S. Pierce, M. Sinclair, and E. Horvitz. Sensing Techniques for Mobile Interaction. ACM UIST, pages 91--100, 2000.
....acceleration sensors. In addition with a modest amount of preprocessing only minimal communication bandwidth is needed to read the relevant information. Thus such a network can be unobtrusively integrated in an arbitrary outfit. While much work has been devoted to accelerometric context detection [24, 19, 18, 7] with the exception of [15] which relied on several sensors distributed over the hand the use of a distributed network has not been studied. A detailed description of our approach to movement and posture recognition is beyond the scope of this paper. Instead the following section provides an ....
K. Hinckley, J. Pierce, M. Sinclair, and E. Horvitz. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In User Interface Software and Technology, pages 91--100, 2000.
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Hinckley, K., Pierce, J., Sinclair, M., and Horvitz, E. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In Proceedings of the ACM UIST 2000 Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology. (San Diego, CA, Nov. 2000). ACM Press, NY, 91--100.
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K. Hinckley, J. Pierce, M. Sinclair, and E. Horvitz, Sensing Techniques for Mobile Interaction, In Proceedings of the ACM UIST 2000 Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology, November 2000, San Diego, California, pp. 91-100.
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K. Hinckley, J. Pierce, M. Sinclair, and E. Horvitz, Sensing Techniques for Mobile Interaction, In Proceedings of the ACM UIST 2000 Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology, November 2000, San Diego, California, pp. 91-100.
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K. Hinckley, J. Pierce, M. Sinclair, and E. Horvitz. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In UIST '00: Proceedings of the 13th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology, pages 91--100, New York, NY, USA, 2000. ACM Press.
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Ken Hinckley, Jeffrey S. Pierce, Mike Sinclair, and Eric Horvitz. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In Proceedings of the 13th annual ACM symposium on User Interface Software and Technology (UIST 2000.
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Hinckley, K., J. Pierce, M. Sinclair, and E. Horvitz. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In Proceedings of UIST: ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology: ACM Press. pp. 91-100, 2000.
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HINCKLEY, K., PIERCE, J. S., SINCLAIR, M., AND HORVITZ, E. 2000. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In Proceedings of the 13th annual ACM symposium on User Interface Software and Technology (UIST 2000), 91--100.
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Hinckley, K., et al. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. in ACM UIST'00. 2000. San Diego, CA: ACM Press.
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K.J. Hinckley, M.P. Sinclaire, and E. Horvitz. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology, 2000.
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Hinckley, K., Pierce, J., Sinclair, M., and Horvitz, E. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. Proceedings User Interface Software and Technology (UIST 2000). ACM (2000), 91--100.
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Hinckley, K., Sinclaire, M., Horvitz, E.: Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In: ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology, CHI Letters 2 (2. (2000) 91--100
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K. Hinckley, J. Pierce, M. Sinclair, and E Horvitz. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In User Interface Software and Technology, pages 91--100, 2000.
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K. Hinkley, J. Pierce, and E. Horvitz, "Sensing Techniques for Mobile Interaction, " in Proceedings of ACM UIST, 2000, pp. 91-100.
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Hinckley K., Pierce J., Sinclair M., and Horwitz E., "Sensing Techniques for Mobile Interaction". ACM UIST 2000.
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Ken Hinckley, Jeff Pierce, Mike Sinclair, and Eric Horvitz. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In UIST 2000, pages 91--100. ACM, 2000.
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K. Hickley, J. Pierce, M. Sinclair, and E. Horvitz. Sensing Techniques for Mobile Interaction. In UIST, pages 91--100, 2000.
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Hinckley, K., Sinclaire, M., Horvitz, E.: Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In: ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology, CHI Letters 2 (2. (2000) 91--100
No context found.
Hinckley K., Pierce J., Sinclair M., and Horvitz E. Sensing Techniques for Mobile Interaction. In UIST, pages 91-100, 2000.
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Ken Hinckley, Jeff Pierce, Mike Sinclair, and Eric Horvitz. Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. In UIST 2000, pages 91--100. ACM, 2000.
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Hinckley, K., Pierce, J., Sinclair, M., & Horvitz, E. (2000). Sensing techniques for mobile interaction. ACM UIST Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology. p. 91-100.
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K. Hinckley, J. Pierce, M. Sinclair, E. Horvitz. Sensing Techniques for Mobile Interaction. In Proc. UIST 2000, p. 91--100.
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