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Hands as a Controller
Author(s) -
İdil Bostan,
Oğuz Buruk,
Mert Canat,
M. Ozan Tezcan,
Celalettin Yurdakul,
Tilbe Göksun,
Oğuzhan Özcan
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
digital collections portal (koç university)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/3064663.3064766
Subject(s) - gesture , categorization , computer science , modality (human–computer interaction) , set (abstract data type) , human–computer interaction , feeling , gesture recognition , object (grammar) , artificial intelligence , psychology , programming language , social psychology
Hand-specific on-skin (HSoS) gestures are a trending interaction modality yet there is a gap in the field regarding users' preferences about these gestures. Thus, we conducted a user-elicitation study collecting 957 gestures from 19 participants for 26 commands. Results indicate that (1) users use one hand as a reference object, (2) load different meanings to different parts of the hand, (3) give importance to hand-properties rather than the skin properties and (4) hands can turn into self-interfaces. Moreover, according to users' subjective evaluations, (5) exclusive gestures are less tiring than the intuitive ones. We present users' subjective evaluations regarding these and present a 33-element taxonomy to categorize them. Furthermore, we present two user-defined gesture sets; the intuitive set including users' first choices and natural-feeling gestures, and the exclusive set which includes more creative gestures indigenous to this modality. Our findings can inspire and guide designers and developers of HSoS.

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