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Sensing Techniques for Mobile Interaction

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by Ken Hinckley , Jeff Pierce , Mike Sinclair , Eric Horvitz
Venue:ACM UIST
Citations:233 - 17 self
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BibTeX

@ARTICLE{Hinckley_sensingtechniques,
    author = {Ken Hinckley and Jeff Pierce and Mike Sinclair and Eric Horvitz},
    title = {Sensing Techniques for Mobile Interaction},
    journal = {ACM UIST},
    year = {},
    pages = {91}
}

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Abstract

We describe sensing techniques motivated by unique aspects of human-computer interaction with handheld devices in mobile settings. Special features of mobile interaction include changing orientation and position, changing venues, the use of computing as auxiliary to ongoing, real-world activities like talking to a colleague, and the general intimacy of use for such devices. We introduce and integrate a set of sensors into a handheld device, and demonstrate several new functionalities engendered by the sensors, such as recording memos when the device is held like a cell phone, switching between portrait and landscape display modes by holding the device in the desired orientation, automatically powering up the device when the user picks it up the device to start using it, and scrolling the display using tilt. We present an informal experiment, initial usability testing results, and user reactions to these techniques.

Keyphrases

mobile interaction    handheld device    landscape display mode    desired orientation    human-computer interaction    user reaction    general intimacy    mobile setting    several new functionality    unique aspect    cell phone    initial usability    special feature    informal experiment    real-world activity   

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