| W.W. Mayol, B. Tordoff and D.W. Murray, "Wearable Visual Robots," in IEEE International Symposium on Wearable Computers, Atlanta GA, October, USA, 2000. |
....If the field worker wears the camera the remote expert can suffer effects similar to being seasick . Mayol et al. 2000) found that the highest score for the combination of steadiness and FOW (field of view) is gained by wearing the camera on the shoulder in stead of the head, hand or chest [11]. In addition, the camera may have a built in steadying function or the 90 remote expert may steer the view using a far end camera control mechanism, as with the gesturecam [12] Keep use as simple as possible. The terminal should be simple for making calls, with the functionality restricted ....
W.W.Mayol, B. Trdoff, D:W: Murray, "Wearable Visual Robots", The fourth international symposium on wearable computers, page 95-102, IEEE computer Society. ISBN 0-7695- 07695-6, San Francisco 16-17 October 2000.
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W.W. Mayol, B. Tordoff and D.W. Murray, "Wearable Visual Robots," in IEEE International Symposium on Wearable Computers, Atlanta GA, October, USA, 2000.
No context found.
W.W. Mayol, B. Tordoff, and D.W. Murray. Wearable visual robots. In Proc 4th IEEE Int Symp on Wearable Computing, Atlanta GA, Oct 16-17, 2000.
No context found.
W.W. Mayol, B. Tordoff and D.W. Murray, "Wearable Visual Robots," in IEEE International Symposium on Wearable Computers, Atlanta GA, October, USA, 2000.
.... camera looks forward, an orientation also used when the camera is attached to a head mounted display [2] In contrast, 11, 6] uses a camera worn on the chest, in [5] an omnidirectional camera is used above the head, and a wide angle lens camera mounted at the back in [12] and in previous work [4] we placed a miniature active vision system on the shoulder. In a previous paper [4] we identified three frames of reference for measurements that a wearable sensor makes: I relative to the user body (e.g. sensing the manipulative space in front of the user s chest) II relative to the static ....
....mounted display [2] In contrast, 11, 6] uses a camera worn on the chest, in [5] an omnidirectional camera is used above the head, and a wide angle lens camera mounted at the back in [12] and in previous work [4] we placed a miniature active vision system on the shoulder. In a previous paper [4], we identified three frames of reference for measurements that a wearable sensor makes: I relative to the user body (e.g. sensing the manipulative space in front of the user s chest) II relative to the static world (e.g. sensing the ceiling floor texture to infer user s location) III relative ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
W.W. Mayol, B. Torddoff and D.W. Murray, "Wearable Visual Robots," IEEE International Symposium on Wearable Computing, Atlanta GA, USA, October, 2000.
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