Title
Camera Mouse: Dwell Vs. Computer Vision-Based Intentional Click Activation
Abstract
People with severe motion impairments may face challenges using assistive interface devices for common point-and-click tasks. A motion tracking interface, the Camera Mouse, allows users to control a mouse pointer with their head and click by dwelling the pointer over a target. Previous studies evaluated the use of an attached sensor (ClickerAID) as an alternative to the dwell-time clicking. However, the sensor's proprietary hardware is a barrier to adaptation. Here, we present a computer-vision based alternative that can be used to actuate mouse clicks. We conducted a preliminary evaluation of our interface and compare to previous results. Although quantitative evaluation did not achieve the same speed and acuracy as the other measures, the non-contact approach to intentional click activation demonstrates benefits compared to the other techniques.
Year
DOI
Venue
2017
10.1007/978-3-319-58703-5_34
UNIVERSAL ACCESS IN HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION: DESIGNING NOVEL INTERACTIONS, PT II
Keywords
Field
DocType
Mouse-replacement interfaces, Camera Mouse, Dwelling, Intentional muscle contractions
Pointer (computer programming),Computer vision,Proprietary hardware,Computer graphics (images),Computer science,Pointer (user interface),Artificial intelligence,Match moving
Conference
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
10278
0302-9743
1
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.43
4
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Rafael Zuniga110.43
John J. Magee29712.08