Scale impacts elicited gestures for manipulating holograms: Implications for AR gesture design
Because gesture design for augmented reality (AR) remains idiosyncratic, people cannot necessarily use gestures learned in one AR application in another. To design discoverable gestures, we need to understand what gestures people expect to use. We explore how the scale of AR affects the gestures peo...
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sg-smu-ink.sis_research-89802023-08-15T01:41:21Z Scale impacts elicited gestures for manipulating holograms: Implications for AR gesture design PHAM, Tran VERMEULEN, Jo TANG, Anthony MACDONALD, Lindsay Because gesture design for augmented reality (AR) remains idiosyncratic, people cannot necessarily use gestures learned in one AR application in another. To design discoverable gestures, we need to understand what gestures people expect to use. We explore how the scale of AR affects the gestures people expect to use to interact with 3D holograms. Using an elicitation study, we asked participants to generate gestures in response to holographic task referents, where we varied the scale of holograms from desktop-scale to room-scale objects. We found that the scale of objects and scenes in the AR experience moderates the generated gestures. Most gestures were informed by physical interaction, and when people interacted from a distance, they sought a good perspective on the target object before and during the interaction. These results suggest that gesture designers need to account for scale, and should not simply reuse gestures across different hologram sizes. 2018-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/7977 info:doi/10.1145/3196709.3196719 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/8980/viewcontent/3196709.3196719.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Augmented reality Gesture elicitation Gestures HoloLens Graphics and Human Computer Interfaces |
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Augmented reality Gesture elicitation Gestures HoloLens Graphics and Human Computer Interfaces PHAM, Tran VERMEULEN, Jo TANG, Anthony MACDONALD, Lindsay Scale impacts elicited gestures for manipulating holograms: Implications for AR gesture design |
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Because gesture design for augmented reality (AR) remains idiosyncratic, people cannot necessarily use gestures learned in one AR application in another. To design discoverable gestures, we need to understand what gestures people expect to use. We explore how the scale of AR affects the gestures people expect to use to interact with 3D holograms. Using an elicitation study, we asked participants to generate gestures in response to holographic task referents, where we varied the scale of holograms from desktop-scale to room-scale objects. We found that the scale of objects and scenes in the AR experience moderates the generated gestures. Most gestures were informed by physical interaction, and when people interacted from a distance, they sought a good perspective on the target object before and during the interaction. These results suggest that gesture designers need to account for scale, and should not simply reuse gestures across different hologram sizes. |
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text |
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PHAM, Tran VERMEULEN, Jo TANG, Anthony MACDONALD, Lindsay |
author_facet |
PHAM, Tran VERMEULEN, Jo TANG, Anthony MACDONALD, Lindsay |
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PHAM, Tran |
title |
Scale impacts elicited gestures for manipulating holograms: Implications for AR gesture design |
title_short |
Scale impacts elicited gestures for manipulating holograms: Implications for AR gesture design |
title_full |
Scale impacts elicited gestures for manipulating holograms: Implications for AR gesture design |
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Scale impacts elicited gestures for manipulating holograms: Implications for AR gesture design |
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Scale impacts elicited gestures for manipulating holograms: Implications for AR gesture design |
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scale impacts elicited gestures for manipulating holograms: implications for ar gesture design |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2018 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/7977 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/8980/viewcontent/3196709.3196719.pdf |
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