Publication | Closed Access
Combining and measuring the benefits of bimanual pen and direct-touch interaction on horizontal interfaces
151
Citations
34
References
2008
Year
Unknown Venue
Haptic FeedbackBimanual PenEngineeringEducationHaptic TechnologyMotor ControlHorizontal InterfacesRepresentative Bimanual TaskBimanual InputTouch User InterfaceVirtual RealityRobot LearningMultimodal Human Computer InterfaceAssistive TechnologyInput DeviceInteraction TechniqueDesignUser ExperienceDirect-touch InteractionBimanual InteractionNovel InterfaceAutomationHuman-computer InteractionTechnology
Many research projects have demonstrated the benefits of bimanual interaction for a variety of tasks. When choosing bimanual input, system designers must select the input device that each hand will control. In this paper, we argue for the use of pen and touch two-handed input, and describe an experiment in which users were faster and committed fewer errors using pen and touch input in comparison to using either touch and touch or pen and pen input while performing a representative bimanual task. We present design principles and an application in which we applied our design rationale toward the creation of a learnable set of bimanual, pen and touch input commands.
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