Friday, July 14, 2017

Award-Winning Research Could Make Wristwatches Smarter Than Smartphones

University News




Award-Winning Research Could Make Wristwatches Smarter Than Smartphones



 


Stony Brook, NY– July 13, 2017

Award-winning research co-authored by 

Xiaojun Bi

, an assistant professor in the 

Department of Computer Science

at 

Stony Brook University

outlines the design, decoding algorithm and implementation for COMPASS, a rotational keyboard that will be used to enter text into smartwatches without the need for a touchscreen.


Entering text on smartwatches is currently quite difficult, especially on those without a virtual keyboard. COMPASS is a text entry method that is based in the bezel of the watch, allowing the user to rotate three cursors that will enable them to select which letter they want to type. After selecting their letter, the locations of the cursors are then dynamically optimized to reduce the distance of the next rotation. This is similar to the predictive typing that most users would be familiar with on their smartphones, but finally allows a comparable method to be applied to smartwatches for the first time.


The researchers evaluated the performance of COMPASS with a series of user studies, which revealed that with 90 minutes of practice, users increased their typing speed from 10 wpm (words per minute) to 12.5 wpm. As stated in the research paper, an advantage of the circular layout is that different from conventional QWERTY keyboards T9 keyboards (the keyboard on the Samsung Gear S2 smartwatch), is that it allows the remaining screen area to be in a round shape. Therefore, the screen contents can be scaled to fit in the inner area without changing the look-and-feel.


Video: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=18MPaI-NB9Q



The research paper won a prestigious award at this year’s

ACM CHI Conference

on Human Factors in Computer Systems (ACM CHI). ACM CHI is the premier international conference of Human-Computer Interaction. Professor Bi’s paper was co-authored by researchers from Tsinghua University (Beijing), the Key Laboratory of Pervasive ...

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