Proceedings of the 2013 ACM International Conference on Interactive Tabletops and Surfaces 2013
DOI: 10.1145/2512349.2512802
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Pen and touch gestural environment for document editing on interactive tabletops

Abstract: Combined pen and touch input is an interaction paradigm attracting increasing interest both in the research community and recently in industry. In this paper, we illustrate how pen and touch interaction techniques can be leveraged for editing and authoring of presentational documents on digital tabletops. Our system exploits the rich interactional vocabulary afforded by the simultaneous availability of the two modalities to provide gesture-driven document editing functionality as an expert alternative to widge… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…The benefits of using multi-touch and pen input in tandem on large interactive surfaces, such as tabletops are well explored (e.g., [9,20,24,30,45,49]). However, with small-sized interactive surfaces, such as with tablets bimanual touch input faces more constraints.…”
Section: Related Work In Multimodal (Pen) Inputmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The benefits of using multi-touch and pen input in tandem on large interactive surfaces, such as tabletops are well explored (e.g., [9,20,24,30,45,49]). However, with small-sized interactive surfaces, such as with tablets bimanual touch input faces more constraints.…”
Section: Related Work In Multimodal (Pen) Inputmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The latest crop of touchscreen devices and currently dominating interaction paradigms indeed suggest another kind of multimodal input tandem, albeit with a very different role distribution: pen and touch. As demonstrated by extensive prior work on the subject, the combination of those two types of input enable rapid and fluid transitions between coarse touch-based navigational gestures and finer-grained pen interactions to enter content and commands [3,10,12,19]. We consider those properties to be of particular relevance to map-related tasks, with a division of labour consisting of multitouch for panning and scaling the map, while the stylus is used for annotations and commands.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They require users to perform gestures defined by themselves to obtain annotation information in addition to common behaviors of paper-based documents, e.g., a nondominant-hand posture [5] and Pen + Touch interaction [6]. However, this reduces the learnability of such a system.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%