David J. Sturman. Whole Hand Input. PhD thesis, Massechusetts Institute of Technology, 1992.

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This paper is cited in the following contexts:
A Survey of Gesture Recognition Techniques - Watson (1993)   (6 citations)  (Correct)

....the glove; a particular combination of sensor readings produced an A , another a B and so on. The advantage of this technique is rapid and robust posture recognition. The disadvantage is inflexibility, in that only those postures it was designed for can be recognised. Neither Grimes nor Sturman [41] mention whether calibration was used to adjust for each user before postures were recognised. In 1980, Bolt used a prototype Polhemus 6D pose tracking system for sensing the direction of a point in his Put that there system [3] described in section 1.3.2. The sensor was attached to the user s ....

....results combined to classify the gesture. This combination of results is implemented using a syntactic technique based on a tree of possible classifications from the individual paths. However, the start and end of the paths still have to be made explicit a somewhat artificial constraint. Sturman [41] extended Rubine s systems to deal with multi path gestures using a VPL DataGlove. Significantly, the feature analysis was extended to threedimensions and modified to permit continual analysis and recognition without explicit start and end points. As in Rubine s work, the feature set was chosen ....

David J. Sturman. Whole Hand Input. PhD thesis, Massechusetts Institute of Technology, 1992.

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