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Perception and haptics: towards more accessible computers for motion-impaired users
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Source ACM International Conference Proceeding Series; Vol. 15 archive
Proceedings of the 2001 workshop on Perceptive user interfaces table of contents
Orlando, Florida
SESSION: Paper session #3 table of contents
Pages: 1 - 9  
Year of Publication: 2001
Authors
Faustina Hwang  University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Simeon Keates  University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Patrick Langdon  University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
P. John Clarkson  University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Peter Robinson  University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

For people with motion impairments, access to and independent control of a computer can be essential. Symptoms such as tremor and spasm, however, can make the typical keyboard and mouse arrangement for computer interaction difficult or even impossible to use. This paper describes three approaches to improving computer input effectivness for people with motion impairments. The three approaches are: (1) to increase the number of interaction channels, (2) to enhance commonly existing interaction channels, and (3) to make more effective use of all the available information in an existing input channel. Experiments in multimodal input, haptic feedback, user modelling, and cursor control are discussed in the context of the three approaches. A haptically enhanced keyboard emulator with perceptive capability is proposed, combining approaches in a way that improves computer access for motion impaired users.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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Collaborative Colleagues:
Faustina Hwang: colleagues
Simeon Keates: colleagues
Patrick Langdon: colleagues
P. John Clarkson: colleagues
Peter Robinson: colleagues