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Precise Selection Techniques
for Multi-Touch Screens
The size of human fingers and the lack of
sensing precision can make precise touch screen interactions
difficult. We present a set of five techniques, called Dual Finger
Selections, which leverage the recent development of multi-touch
sensitive displays to help users select very small targets. These
techniques facilitate pixel-accurate targeting by adjusting the
control-display ratio with a secondary finger while the primary
finger controls the movement of the cursor. We also contribute a
"clicking" technique, called SimPress, which reduces motion errors
during clicking and allows us to simulate a hover state on devices
unable to sense proximity. We implemented our techniques on a
multi-touch tabletop prototype that offers computer vision-based
tracking. In our formal user study, we tested the performance of our
three most promising techniques (Stretch, X-Menu, and Slider)
against our baseline (Offset), on four target sizes and three input
noise levels. All three chosen techniques outperformed the control
technique in terms of error rate reduction and were preferred by our
participants, with Stretch being the overall performance and
preference winner.
Benko, H., Wilson, A. D., and Baudisch, P.
2006. Precise selection techniques for multi-touch screens. In
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing
Systems (Montréal, Québec, Canada, April 22 - 27, 2006). R.
Grinter, T. Rodden, P. Aoki, E. Cutrell, R. Jeffries, and G. Olson,
Eds. CHI '06. ACM, New York, NY, 1263-1272.
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