Abstract In the ubiquitous computing environment, people will interact with everyday objects (or computers embedded in them) in ways different from the usual and familiar desktop u...
Seokhee Jeon, Jane Hwang, Gerard Jounghyun Kim, Ma...
Large displays are becoming increasingly common technologies in the workplace because of their potential as information displays and collaboration surfaces. Despite its growing ub...
Elaine M. Huang, Elizabeth D. Mynatt, Daniel M. Ru...
: To overcome limitations of small screens and to provide intuitive ways of interacting with personal data, this work addresses the seamless combination of sensor-enabled phones wi...
Recent interest in large displays has led to renewed development of tiled displays, which are comprised of several individual displays arranged in an array and used as one large l...
This paper presents a new system for interacting with a large display using live video avatar of a user and hand gesture recognition. The system enables a user to appear on a scree...
Sang Chul Ahn, Tae-Seong Lee, Ig-Jae Kim, Yong-Moo...
Although large displays could allow several users to work together and to move freely in a room, their associated interfaces are limited to contact devices that must generally be s...
Previous research has found performance for several egocentric tasks to be superior on physically large displays relative to smaller ones, even when visual angle is held constant....
Jonathan Z. Bakdash, Jason S. Augustyn, Dennis Pro...
A growing body of research is investigating the use of tabletop displays, in particular to support collaborative work. People often interact directly with these displays, typicall...
We introduce ARC-Pad (Absolute+Relative Cursor pad), a novel technique for interacting with large displays using a mobile phone’s touchscreen. In ARC-Pad we combine absolute and...