The Fat Thumb: Using the Thumb’s Contact Size for Single-Handed Mobile Interaction

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

The Fat Thumb: Using the Thumb’s Contact Size for Single-Handed Mobile Interaction. / Boring, Sebastian; Ledo, David; Greenberg, Xiang 'Anthony'; Marquardt, Nicolai; Tang, Anthony; Greenberg, Saul.

2012.

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Boring, S, Ledo, D, Greenberg, XA, Marquardt, N, Tang, A & Greenberg, S 2012, 'The Fat Thumb: Using the Thumb’s Contact Size for Single-Handed Mobile Interaction'.

APA

Boring, S., Ledo, D., Greenberg, X. A., Marquardt, N., Tang, A., & Greenberg, S. (2012). The Fat Thumb: Using the Thumb’s Contact Size for Single-Handed Mobile Interaction.

Vancouver

Boring S, Ledo D, Greenberg XA, Marquardt N, Tang A, Greenberg S. The Fat Thumb: Using the Thumb’s Contact Size for Single-Handed Mobile Interaction. 2012.

Author

Boring, Sebastian ; Ledo, David ; Greenberg, Xiang 'Anthony' ; Marquardt, Nicolai ; Tang, Anthony ; Greenberg, Saul. / The Fat Thumb: Using the Thumb’s Contact Size for Single-Handed Mobile Interaction. 10 s.

Bibtex

@conference{33787828a99b4c9a842c4d0aff46ad94,
title = "The Fat Thumb: Using the Thumb{\textquoteright}s Contact Size for Single-Handed Mobile Interaction",
abstract = "Modern mobile devices allow a rich set of multi-finger interactions that combine modes into a single fluid act, for example, one finger for panning blending into a two-finger pinch gesture for zooming. Such gestures require the use of both hands: one holding the device while the other is interacting. While on the go, however, only one hand may be available to both hold the device and interact with it. This mostly limits interaction to a single-touch (i.e., the thumb), forcing users to switch between input modes explicitly. In this paper, we contribute the Fat Thumb interaction technique, which uses the thumb{\textquoteright}s contact size as a form of simulated pressure. This adds a degree of freedom, which can be used, for example, to integrate panning and zooming into a single interaction. Contact size determines the mode (i.e., panning with a small size, zooming with a large one), while thumb movement performs the selected mode. We discuss nuances of the Fat Thumb based on the thumb{\textquoteright}s limited operational range and motor skills when that hand holds the device. We compared Fat Thumb to three alternative techniques, where people had to precisely pan and zoom to a predefined region on a map and found that the Fat Thumb technique compared well to existing techniques.",
author = "Sebastian Boring and David Ledo and Greenberg, {Xiang 'Anthony'} and Nicolai Marquardt and Anthony Tang and Saul Greenberg",
year = "2012",
month = sep,
day = "21",
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - The Fat Thumb: Using the Thumb’s Contact Size for Single-Handed Mobile Interaction

AU - Boring, Sebastian

AU - Ledo, David

AU - Greenberg, Xiang 'Anthony'

AU - Marquardt, Nicolai

AU - Tang, Anthony

AU - Greenberg, Saul

PY - 2012/9/21

Y1 - 2012/9/21

N2 - Modern mobile devices allow a rich set of multi-finger interactions that combine modes into a single fluid act, for example, one finger for panning blending into a two-finger pinch gesture for zooming. Such gestures require the use of both hands: one holding the device while the other is interacting. While on the go, however, only one hand may be available to both hold the device and interact with it. This mostly limits interaction to a single-touch (i.e., the thumb), forcing users to switch between input modes explicitly. In this paper, we contribute the Fat Thumb interaction technique, which uses the thumb’s contact size as a form of simulated pressure. This adds a degree of freedom, which can be used, for example, to integrate panning and zooming into a single interaction. Contact size determines the mode (i.e., panning with a small size, zooming with a large one), while thumb movement performs the selected mode. We discuss nuances of the Fat Thumb based on the thumb’s limited operational range and motor skills when that hand holds the device. We compared Fat Thumb to three alternative techniques, where people had to precisely pan and zoom to a predefined region on a map and found that the Fat Thumb technique compared well to existing techniques.

AB - Modern mobile devices allow a rich set of multi-finger interactions that combine modes into a single fluid act, for example, one finger for panning blending into a two-finger pinch gesture for zooming. Such gestures require the use of both hands: one holding the device while the other is interacting. While on the go, however, only one hand may be available to both hold the device and interact with it. This mostly limits interaction to a single-touch (i.e., the thumb), forcing users to switch between input modes explicitly. In this paper, we contribute the Fat Thumb interaction technique, which uses the thumb’s contact size as a form of simulated pressure. This adds a degree of freedom, which can be used, for example, to integrate panning and zooming into a single interaction. Contact size determines the mode (i.e., panning with a small size, zooming with a large one), while thumb movement performs the selected mode. We discuss nuances of the Fat Thumb based on the thumb’s limited operational range and motor skills when that hand holds the device. We compared Fat Thumb to three alternative techniques, where people had to precisely pan and zoom to a predefined region on a map and found that the Fat Thumb technique compared well to existing techniques.

M3 - Paper

ER -

ID: 44308019