Capacitive near-field communication for ubiquitous interaction and perception
Author(s) -
Tobias Große-Puppendahl,
Sebastian Herber,
Raphael Wimmer,
Frank Englert,
Sebastian Beck,
Julian von Wilmsdorff,
Reiner Wichert,
Arjan Kuijper
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
citeseer x (the pennsylvania state university)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/2632048.2632053
Subject(s) - ubiquitous computing , computer science , context (archaeology) , human–computer interaction , ambient intelligence , field (mathematics) , wireless sensor network , relevance (law) , object (grammar) , perception , transceiver , spatial contextual awareness , capacitive sensing , wireless , telecommunications , artificial intelligence , computer network , paleontology , mathematics , neuroscience , political science , pure mathematics , law , biology , operating system
Smart objects within instrumented environments offer an always available and intuitive way of interacting with a system. Connecting these objects to other objects in range or even to smartphones and computers, enables substantially innovative interaction and sensing approaches. In this paper, we investigate the concept of Capacitive Near-Field Communication to enable ubiquitous interaction with everyday objects in a short-range spatial context. Our central contribution is a generic framework describing and evaluating this communication method in Ubiquitous Computing. We prove the relevance of our approach by an open-source implementation of a low-cost object tag and a transceiver offering a high-quality communication link at typical distances up to 15 cm. Moreover, we present three case studies considering tangible interaction for the visually impaired, natural interaction with everyday objects, and sleeping behavior analysis
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