“CRISTAL, Control of Remotely Interfaced Systems using Touch-based Actions in Living spaces.” by Seifried, Rendl, Perteneder, Leitner, Haller, et al. …

  • ©Thomas Seifried, Christian Rendl, Florian Perteneder, Jakob Leitner, Michael Haller, Daisuke Sakamoto, Jun Kato, Masahiko Inami, and Stacey D. Scott

  • ©Thomas Seifried, Christian Rendl, Florian Perteneder, Jakob Leitner, Michael Haller, Daisuke Sakamoto, Jun Kato, Masahiko Inami, and Stacey D. Scott

  • ©Thomas Seifried, Christian Rendl, Florian Perteneder, Jakob Leitner, Michael Haller, Daisuke Sakamoto, Jun Kato, Masahiko Inami, and Stacey D. Scott

Conference:


Entry Number: 07

Title:


    CRISTAL, Control of Remotely Interfaced Systems using Touch-based Actions in Living spaces.

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Description:


    The amount of digital appliances and media found in domestic environments has risen drastically over the last decade, for example, digital TVs, DVD and Blu-ray players, digital picture frames, digital gaming systems, electronically moveable window blinds, and robotic vacuum cleaners. As these devices become more compatible to Internet and wireless networking (e.g. Internet-ready TVs, streaming digital picture frames, and WiFi gaming systems, such as Nintendo’s Wii and Sony’s Playstation) and as networking and WiFi home infrastructures become more prevalent, new opportunities arise for developing centralized control of these myriad devices and media into so called “Universal remote controls”. However, many remote controls lack intuitive interfaces for mapping control functions to the device intended being controlled. This often results in trial and error button pressing, or experimentation with graphical user interface (GUI) controls, before a user achieves their intended action.

    To address this issue, CRISTAL (Control of Remotely Interfaced Systems using Touch-based Actions in Living spaces) was developed. CRISTAL simplifies the control of our digital devices in and around the living room. The system provides a novel experience for controlling devices in a home environment by enabling users to directly interact with those devices on a live video image of their living room using multi-touch gestures on a digital tabletop.


Other Information:


    References

    [1] Sakamoto, D., Honda, K., Inami, M., Igarashi, T., “Sketch and Run: A Stroke-based Interface for Home Robots,” Proceeding of the 27th Annual SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI2009), Boston, USA (April 2009).

    [2] Tani, M., Yamaashi, K., Tanikoshi K., Futakawa M., and Tanifuji S., “Object-oriented video: interaction with realworld objects through live video,” Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, Monterey, California, USA (1992), pp. 593-599.


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