articleApr 4, 2009Closed access

User-defined gestures for surface computing

University of Washington · Microsoft (United States)

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Many surface computing prototypes have employed gestures created by system designers. Although such gestures are appropriate for early investigations, they are not necessarily reflective of user behavior. We present an approach to designing tabletop gestures that relies on eliciting gestures from non-technical users by first portraying the effect of a gesture, and then asking users to perform its cause. In all, 1080 gestures from 20 participants were logged, analyzed, and paired with think-aloud data for 27 commands performed with 1 and 2 hands. Our findings indicate that users rarely care about the number of fingers they employ, that one hand is preferred to two, that desktop idioms strongly influence users'…

Citation impact

1,280
total citations
FWCI
61.27
Percentile
100%
References
37
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Gesture
  • Computer science
  • Set (abstract data type)
  • Human–computer interaction
  • Think aloud protocol
  • Multimedia
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Programming language
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