Steven Feiner

2papers

2 Papers

14.3HCApr 3
SwEYEpinch: Exploring Intuitive, Efficient Text Entry for Extended Reality via Eye and Hand Tracking

Ziheng "Leo" Li, Xichen He, Mengyuan "Millie" Wu et al.

Despite steady progress, text entry in Extended Reality (XR) often remains slower and more effortful than typing on a physical keyboard or touchscreen. We explore a simple idea: use gaze to swipe through a virtual keyboard for the fast, low-effort where and a manual pinch held throughout the swipe for the when, extending and validating it through a series of user studies. We first show that a basic version including a low-latency decoder with spatiotemporal Dynamic Time Warping and fixation filtering outperforms selecting individual keys sequentially, either by finger tapping each or gazing at each while pinching. We then add mid-swipe prediction and in-gesture cancellation, improving words per minute (WPM) without hurting accuracy. We show that this approach is faster and more preferred than previous gaze-swipe approaches, finger tapping with prediction, or hand swiping with the same additions. Furthermore, a seven-day, 30-session study demonstrates sustained learning, with peak performance reaching 64.7 WPM.

HCDec 17, 2015
Breaking the Barriers to True Augmented Reality

Christian Sandor, Martin Fuchs, Alvaro Cassinelli et al.

In recent years, Augmented Reality (AR) and Virtual Reality (VR) have gained considerable commercial traction, with Facebook acquiring Oculus VR for \$2 billion, Magic Leap attracting more than \$500 million of funding, and Microsoft announcing their HoloLens head-worn computer. Where is humanity headed: a brave new dystopia-or a paradise come true? In this article, we present discussions, which started at the symposium "Making Augmented Reality Real", held at Nara Institute of Science and Technology in August 2014. Ten scientists were invited to this three-day event, which started with a full day of public presentations and panel discussions (video recordings are available at the event web page), followed by two days of roundtable discussions addressing the future of AR and VR.