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ISMAR 2010 - Best Student Paper Award (ismar10.org)

We present a novel way of interacting with everyday objects by representing content as interactive surface particles. Users can build their own physical world, map virtual content onto their physical construction and play directly with the surface using a stylus. A surface particle representation allows programmed content to be created independent of the display object and to be reused on many surfaces. We demonstrated this idea through a projector-camera system that acquires the object geometry and enables direct interaction through an IR tracked stylus. We present three motivating example applications, each displayed on three example surfaces. We discuss a set of interaction techniques that show possible avenues for structuring interaction on complicated everyday objects, such as Surface Adaptive GUIs for menu selection. Through an informal evaluation and interviews with end users, we demonstrate the potential of interacting with surface particles and identify improvements necessary to make this interaction practical on everyday surfaces.

Paper: brettrjones.com/data/SIE.pdf
  • FIBER festival plus 1 year ago
    Impressive! We love these new applied projections and new ways of interacting with interfaces using the physical reality too.
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  • uncledj 1 year ago
    yes, one of the best I see this year. I just wonder when you do the mapping, did you use some kind of cornerstone program for surface mapping, if so, how do you achieve more than 4 corners objects points?
  • Hi Uncledj,

    The software is actually a custom built application that has a full 3D scan of the display object. Unfortunately, the project is not robust enough to be distributed.
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  • You might also find this project interesting too: skagit.meas.ncsu.edu/~helena/wrriwork/tangis/tangis.html they use clay model as a base and scan it into a virtual model in a GIS/mapping platform, then project new data onto the model (e.g. hydro flow) using changes in the base. Your video reminded me of it.
  • Hi Tyler,

    Thanks for the link. We actually cite one of Ishii's papers, but I hadn't heard of that one. Surface visualizations are an interesting application area.
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  • the Uranusweg Project 8 months ago
    Amazing
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