We present results of two pilot studies that investigated human error behaviours with an error prone in-air gesture recognizer. During the studies, users performed a small set of simple in-air gestures. In the first study, these gestures were abstract. The second study associated concrete tasks with each gesture. Interestingly, the error patterns observed in the two studies were substantially different.
@article{arxiv.2105.12453,
title = {How Do Users Interact with an Error-Prone In-Air Gesture Recognizer?},
author = {Ahmed Sabbir Arif and Wolfgang Stuerzlinger and Euclides Jose de Mendonca Filho and Alec Gordynski},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2105.12453},
year = {2021}
}
Comments
In CHI 2014 Workshop on Gesture-based Interaction Design: Communication and Cognition (April 26, 2014). Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 69-72