This work explores a new direction in utilizing eye gaze for computer input. Gaze tracking has long been considered as an alternative or potentially superior pointing method for computer input. We believe that many fundamental limitations exist with traditional gaze pointing. In particular, it is unnatural to overload a perceptual channel such as vision with a motor control task. We therefore propose an alternative approach, dubbed MAGIC (Manual And Gaze Input Cascaded) pointing. With such an approach, pointing appears to the user to be a manual task, used for fine manipulation and selection. However, a large portion of the cursor movement is eliminated by warping the cursor to the eye gaze area, which encompasses the target. Two specific MAGIC pointing techniques, one conservative and one liberal, were designed, analyzed, and implemented with an eye tracker we developed. They were then tested in a pilot study. This earlystage exploration showed that the MAGIC pointing techniques might offer many advantages, including reduced physical effort and fatigue as compared to traditional manual pointing, greater accuracy and naturalness than traditional gaze pointing, and possibly faster speed than manual pointing. The pros and cons of the two techniques are discussed in light of both performance data and subjective reports.
This paper discusses several usability issues related to the use of gestures as an input mode in multimodal interfaces. The use of gestures has been suggested before as a natural solution for applications that require hands-free and notouch interaction with computers, such as in virtual reality (VR) environments. We introduce a simple but robust 2D computer vision based gesture recognition system that was successfully used for interaction in VR environments such as CAVEs and Powerwalls. This interface was tested under 3 different scenarios, as a regular pointing device in a GUI interface, as a navigation tool, and as a visualization tool. Our experiments show that the time to completion of simple pointing tasks is considerably slower when compared to a mouse and that its use during even short periods of time causes fatigue. Despite these drawbacks, the use of gestures as an alternative mode in multimodal interfaces offers several advantages, such as quick access to computing resources that might be embedded in the environment, using a natural and intuitive way, and that scales nicely to group and collaborative applications, where gestures can be used sporadically.
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