A handle bar metaphor for virtual object manipulation with mid-air interaction

P Song, WB Goh, W Hutama, CW Fu, X Liu�- Proceedings of the SIGCHI�…, 2012 - dl.acm.org
P Song, WB Goh, W Hutama, CW Fu, X Liu
Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on human factors in computing systems, 2012dl.acm.org
Commercial 3D scene acquisition systems such as the Microsoft Kinect sensor can reduce
the cost barrier of realizing mid-air interaction. However, since it can only sense hand
position but not hand orientation robustly, current mid-air interaction methods for 3D virtual
object manipulation often require contextual and mode switching to perform translation,
rotation, and scaling, thus preventing natural continuous gestural interactions. A novel
handle bar metaphor is proposed as an effective visual control metaphor between the user's�…
Commercial 3D scene acquisition systems such as the Microsoft Kinect sensor can reduce the cost barrier of realizing mid-air interaction. However, since it can only sense hand position but not hand orientation robustly, current mid-air interaction methods for 3D virtual object manipulation often require contextual and mode switching to perform translation, rotation, and scaling, thus preventing natural continuous gestural interactions. A novel handle bar metaphor is proposed as an effective visual control metaphor between the user's hand gestures and the corresponding virtual object manipulation operations. It mimics a familiar situation of handling objects that are skewered with a bimanual handle bar. The use of relative 3D motion of the two hands to design the mid-air interaction allows us to provide precise controllability despite the Kinect sensor's low image resolution. A comprehensive repertoire of 3D manipulation operations is proposed to manipulate single objects, perform fast constrained rotation, and pack/align multiple objects along a line. Three user studies were devised to demonstrate the efficacy and intuitiveness of the proposed interaction techniques on different virtual manipulation scenarios.
ACM Digital Library