2009
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-03655-2_90
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TimeTilt: Using Sensor-Based Gestures to Travel through Multiple Applications on a Mobile Device

Abstract: Abstract. We present TimeTilt, a sensor-based technique that allows multiple windows switching on mobile devices, and which overcomes the limitations of mobile devices, i.e. their impoverished input bandwidth (often no keyboard, a small tactile screen and the drawbacks of one-handed interaction). TimeTilt, which is based on a lenticular metaphor, aims at both reducing the activation time when switching between views, and supporting a natural mapping between the gestures and the navigation. We draw a brief clas… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(19 citation statements)
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References 11 publications
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“…Devices can distinguish if the user touches the screen with the thumb vs. the index finger [12], or use grip sensing to avoid accidental screen auto-rotation [7]. Whacking [23] or jerking motions [39] offer out-of-band signals distinct from incidental handling of a device. We illustrate new techniques that leverage these types of motion sensing, grip sensing, and multi-touch inputs when they are distributed across separate pen and tablet devices.…”
Section: Mobile Sensing On Handheldsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Devices can distinguish if the user touches the screen with the thumb vs. the index finger [12], or use grip sensing to avoid accidental screen auto-rotation [7]. Whacking [23] or jerking motions [39] offer out-of-band signals distinct from incidental handling of a device. We illustrate new techniques that leverage these types of motion sensing, grip sensing, and multi-touch inputs when they are distributed across separate pen and tablet devices.…”
Section: Mobile Sensing On Handheldsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As witnessed by the proliferation in mobile sensing [7,12,19,23,24,39], there is great potential to resolve such ambiguities using sensors, rather than foisting complexity on the user to establish the missing context [6]. As sensors and computation migrate into tiny mobile devices, pens no longer need to be conceived primarily as passive intermediaries without a life once they move away from the display.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Inspired from real world objects, Roudaut et al propose two TimeTilt interaction techniques based on accelerometers [30]. (27) is a position-controlled interaction technique that enables choosing among different views by rotating the device.…”
Section: Timetilt and Taptapmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They propose a positioncontrolled gestural menu to select an option through physical gestures (30). We decided to classify this interaction technique as pragmatically direct as the paper does not associate any system command to the proposed gestures.…”
Section: Miscellaneousmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nous présen-tons donc TimeTilt [30], une technique utilisant les accé-léromètres et le langage gestuel pour permettre de changer aisément et rapidement de fenêtre sur un dispositif mobile. Cette technique est fondée sur la métaphore des cartes à effet lenticulaire qui permettent, selon l'inclinaison de la carte, de présenter plusieurs images distinctes.…”
Section: Conclusion Et Perspectivesunclassified