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Human-computer interaction [[electronic resource] ] : an empirical research perspective / / I. Scott MacKenzie
Human-computer interaction [[electronic resource] ] : an empirical research perspective / / I. Scott MacKenzie
Autore MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Waltham, Mass., : Morgan Kaufmann, 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (370 p.)
Disciplina 006.3
Soggetto topico Human-computer interaction
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-283-93319-5
0-12-407165-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Human-Computer Interaction; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Author Biography; 1 Historical Context; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Vannevar Bush's "as we may think" (1945); 1.3 Ivan Sutherland's Sketchpad (1962); 1.4 Invention of the mouse (1963); 1.5 Xerox star (1981); 1.6 Birth of HCI (1983); 1.6.1 First ACM SIGCHI conference (1983); 1.6.2 The psychology of human-computer interaction (1983); 1.6.3 Launch of the Apple Macintosh (1984); 1.7 Growth of HCI and graphical user interfaces (GUIs); 1.8 Growth of HCI research; 1.9 Other readings; 1.10 Resources
Student Exercises 2 The Human Factor; 2.1 Time scale of human action; 2.2 Human factors; 2.3 Sensors; 2.3.1 Vision (Sight); 2.3.2 Hearing (Audition); 2.3.3 Touch (Tactition); 2.3.4 Smell and taste; 2.3.5 Other senses; 2.4 Responders; 2.4.1 Limbs; 2.4.2 Voice; 2.4.3 Eyes; 2.5 The brain; 2.5.1 Perception; 2.5.2 Cognition; 2.5.3 Memory; 2.6 Language; 2.6.1 Redundancy in language; 2.6.2 Entropy in language; 2.7 Human performance; 2.7.1 Reaction time; 2.7.2 Visual search; 2.7.3 Skilled behavior; 2.7.4 Attention; 2.7.5 Human error; Student Exercises; 3 Interaction Elements
3.1 Hard controls and soft controls 3.2 Control-display relationships; 3.2.1 Spatial relationships; 3.2.2 CD gain and transfer function; 3.2.3 Latency; 3.2.4 Property sensed and order of control; 3.3 Natural versus learned relationships; 3.4 Mental models and metaphor; 3.5 Modes; 3.6 More about degrees of freedom; 3.7 Mobile context; 3.8 Interaction errors; Student Exercises; 4 Scientific Foundations; 4.1 What is research?; 4.1.1 Research must be published; 4.1.2 Citations, references, impact; 4.1.3 Research must be reproducible; 4.1.4 Research versus engineering versus design
4.2 What is empirical research?4.3 Research methods; 4.3.1 Observational method; 4.3.2 Experimental method; 4.3.3 Correlational method; 4.4 Observe and measure; 4.4.1 Observation; 4.4.2 Measurement scales; 4.4.3 Nominal; 4.4.4 Ordinal data; 4.4.5 Interval data; 4.4.6 Ratio data; 4.5 Research questions; 4.6 Internal validity and external validity; 4.7 Comparative evaluations; 4.8 Relationships: circumstantial and causal; 4.9 Research topics; 4.9.1 Ideas; 4.9.2 Finding a topic; 4.9.3 Tip #1: Think small!; 4.9.4 Tip #2: Replicate!; 4.9.5 Tip #3: Know the literature!
4.9.6 Tip #4: Think inside the box!Student Exercises; 5 Designing HCI Experiments; 5.1 What methodology?; 5.2 Ethics approval; 5.3 Experiment design; 5.4 Independent variables; 5.5 Dependent variables; 5.6 Other variables; 5.6.1 Control variables; 5.6.2 Random variables; 5.6.3 Confounding variables; 5.7 Task and procedure; 5.8 Participants; 5.9 Questionnaire design; 5.10 Within-subjects and between-subjects; 5.11 Order effects, counterbalancing, and latin squares; 5.12 Group effects and asymmetric skill transfer; 5.13 Longitudinal studies; 5.14 Running the experiment; Student Exercises
6 Hypothesis Testing
Record Nr. UNINA-9910463426903321
MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->  
Waltham, Mass., : Morgan Kaufmann, 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Human-computer interaction : an empirical research perspective / / I. Scott MacKenzie
Human-computer interaction : an empirical research perspective / / I. Scott MacKenzie
Autore MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Waltham, Mass., : Morgan Kaufmann, 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xvii, 351 pages) : illustrations (some color)
Disciplina 006.3
Collana Gale eBooks
Soggetto topico Human-computer interaction
ISBN 1-283-93319-5
0-12-407165-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Human-Computer Interaction; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Author Biography; 1 Historical Context; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Vannevar Bush's "as we may think" (1945); 1.3 Ivan Sutherland's Sketchpad (1962); 1.4 Invention of the mouse (1963); 1.5 Xerox star (1981); 1.6 Birth of HCI (1983); 1.6.1 First ACM SIGCHI conference (1983); 1.6.2 The psychology of human-computer interaction (1983); 1.6.3 Launch of the Apple Macintosh (1984); 1.7 Growth of HCI and graphical user interfaces (GUIs); 1.8 Growth of HCI research; 1.9 Other readings; 1.10 Resources
Student Exercises 2 The Human Factor; 2.1 Time scale of human action; 2.2 Human factors; 2.3 Sensors; 2.3.1 Vision (Sight); 2.3.2 Hearing (Audition); 2.3.3 Touch (Tactition); 2.3.4 Smell and taste; 2.3.5 Other senses; 2.4 Responders; 2.4.1 Limbs; 2.4.2 Voice; 2.4.3 Eyes; 2.5 The brain; 2.5.1 Perception; 2.5.2 Cognition; 2.5.3 Memory; 2.6 Language; 2.6.1 Redundancy in language; 2.6.2 Entropy in language; 2.7 Human performance; 2.7.1 Reaction time; 2.7.2 Visual search; 2.7.3 Skilled behavior; 2.7.4 Attention; 2.7.5 Human error; Student Exercises; 3 Interaction Elements
3.1 Hard controls and soft controls 3.2 Control-display relationships; 3.2.1 Spatial relationships; 3.2.2 CD gain and transfer function; 3.2.3 Latency; 3.2.4 Property sensed and order of control; 3.3 Natural versus learned relationships; 3.4 Mental models and metaphor; 3.5 Modes; 3.6 More about degrees of freedom; 3.7 Mobile context; 3.8 Interaction errors; Student Exercises; 4 Scientific Foundations; 4.1 What is research?; 4.1.1 Research must be published; 4.1.2 Citations, references, impact; 4.1.3 Research must be reproducible; 4.1.4 Research versus engineering versus design
4.2 What is empirical research?4.3 Research methods; 4.3.1 Observational method; 4.3.2 Experimental method; 4.3.3 Correlational method; 4.4 Observe and measure; 4.4.1 Observation; 4.4.2 Measurement scales; 4.4.3 Nominal; 4.4.4 Ordinal data; 4.4.5 Interval data; 4.4.6 Ratio data; 4.5 Research questions; 4.6 Internal validity and external validity; 4.7 Comparative evaluations; 4.8 Relationships: circumstantial and causal; 4.9 Research topics; 4.9.1 Ideas; 4.9.2 Finding a topic; 4.9.3 Tip #1: Think small!; 4.9.4 Tip #2: Replicate!; 4.9.5 Tip #3: Know the literature!
4.9.6 Tip #4: Think inside the box!Student Exercises; 5 Designing HCI Experiments; 5.1 What methodology?; 5.2 Ethics approval; 5.3 Experiment design; 5.4 Independent variables; 5.5 Dependent variables; 5.6 Other variables; 5.6.1 Control variables; 5.6.2 Random variables; 5.6.3 Confounding variables; 5.7 Task and procedure; 5.8 Participants; 5.9 Questionnaire design; 5.10 Within-subjects and between-subjects; 5.11 Order effects, counterbalancing, and latin squares; 5.12 Group effects and asymmetric skill transfer; 5.13 Longitudinal studies; 5.14 Running the experiment; Student Exercises
6 Hypothesis Testing
Record Nr. UNINA-9910786177603321
MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->  
Waltham, Mass., : Morgan Kaufmann, 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Human-computer interaction : an empirical research perspective / / I. Scott MacKenzie
Human-computer interaction : an empirical research perspective / / I. Scott MacKenzie
Autore MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Waltham, Mass., : Morgan Kaufmann, 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xvii, 351 pages) : illustrations (some color)
Disciplina 006.3
Collana Gale eBooks
Soggetto topico Human-computer interaction
ISBN 1-283-93319-5
0-12-407165-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Human-Computer Interaction; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Author Biography; 1 Historical Context; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Vannevar Bush's "as we may think" (1945); 1.3 Ivan Sutherland's Sketchpad (1962); 1.4 Invention of the mouse (1963); 1.5 Xerox star (1981); 1.6 Birth of HCI (1983); 1.6.1 First ACM SIGCHI conference (1983); 1.6.2 The psychology of human-computer interaction (1983); 1.6.3 Launch of the Apple Macintosh (1984); 1.7 Growth of HCI and graphical user interfaces (GUIs); 1.8 Growth of HCI research; 1.9 Other readings; 1.10 Resources
Student Exercises 2 The Human Factor; 2.1 Time scale of human action; 2.2 Human factors; 2.3 Sensors; 2.3.1 Vision (Sight); 2.3.2 Hearing (Audition); 2.3.3 Touch (Tactition); 2.3.4 Smell and taste; 2.3.5 Other senses; 2.4 Responders; 2.4.1 Limbs; 2.4.2 Voice; 2.4.3 Eyes; 2.5 The brain; 2.5.1 Perception; 2.5.2 Cognition; 2.5.3 Memory; 2.6 Language; 2.6.1 Redundancy in language; 2.6.2 Entropy in language; 2.7 Human performance; 2.7.1 Reaction time; 2.7.2 Visual search; 2.7.3 Skilled behavior; 2.7.4 Attention; 2.7.5 Human error; Student Exercises; 3 Interaction Elements
3.1 Hard controls and soft controls 3.2 Control-display relationships; 3.2.1 Spatial relationships; 3.2.2 CD gain and transfer function; 3.2.3 Latency; 3.2.4 Property sensed and order of control; 3.3 Natural versus learned relationships; 3.4 Mental models and metaphor; 3.5 Modes; 3.6 More about degrees of freedom; 3.7 Mobile context; 3.8 Interaction errors; Student Exercises; 4 Scientific Foundations; 4.1 What is research?; 4.1.1 Research must be published; 4.1.2 Citations, references, impact; 4.1.3 Research must be reproducible; 4.1.4 Research versus engineering versus design
4.2 What is empirical research?4.3 Research methods; 4.3.1 Observational method; 4.3.2 Experimental method; 4.3.3 Correlational method; 4.4 Observe and measure; 4.4.1 Observation; 4.4.2 Measurement scales; 4.4.3 Nominal; 4.4.4 Ordinal data; 4.4.5 Interval data; 4.4.6 Ratio data; 4.5 Research questions; 4.6 Internal validity and external validity; 4.7 Comparative evaluations; 4.8 Relationships: circumstantial and causal; 4.9 Research topics; 4.9.1 Ideas; 4.9.2 Finding a topic; 4.9.3 Tip #1: Think small!; 4.9.4 Tip #2: Replicate!; 4.9.5 Tip #3: Know the literature!
4.9.6 Tip #4: Think inside the box!Student Exercises; 5 Designing HCI Experiments; 5.1 What methodology?; 5.2 Ethics approval; 5.3 Experiment design; 5.4 Independent variables; 5.5 Dependent variables; 5.6 Other variables; 5.6.1 Control variables; 5.6.2 Random variables; 5.6.3 Confounding variables; 5.7 Task and procedure; 5.8 Participants; 5.9 Questionnaire design; 5.10 Within-subjects and between-subjects; 5.11 Order effects, counterbalancing, and latin squares; 5.12 Group effects and asymmetric skill transfer; 5.13 Longitudinal studies; 5.14 Running the experiment; Student Exercises
6 Hypothesis Testing
Record Nr. UNINA-9910812007003321
MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->  
Waltham, Mass., : Morgan Kaufmann, 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Text entry systems [[electronic resource] ] : mobility, accessibility, universality / / edited by I. Scott MacKenzie and Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii
Text entry systems [[electronic resource] ] : mobility, accessibility, universality / / edited by I. Scott MacKenzie and Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii
Autore MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam, : Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann, c2007
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (343 p.)
Disciplina 004
004 22
Altri autori (Persone) Tanaka-IshiiKumiko
Collana The Morgan Kaufmann series in interactive technologies
Soggetto topico Computers
Electronic data processing - Data entry
Human-computer interaction
Natural language processing (Computer science)
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-281-05354-6
9786611053543
0-08-048979-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Text Entry Systems: Mobility, Accessibility, Universality; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface: Variety and Universality; Part 1 Foundations; Chapter 1 Historical Overview of Consumer Text Entry Technologies; 1.1 INTRODUCTION; 1.2 TYPEWRITER, 1870's TO 1980's; 1.3 PERSONAL COMPUTER, 1980's TO PRESENT; 1.4 MOBILE PHONES, 1990's TO PRESENT; 1.5 HANDHELD COMPUTERS; 1.6 CONCLUSIONS; 1.7 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 2 Language Models for Text Entry; 2.1 INTRODUCTION; 2.2 BASIC MODEL OF TEXT ENTRY; 2.3 N-GRAM MODELS; 2.4 HIDDEN MARKOV MODEL; 2.5 ADAPTIVE MODELS
2.6 CONCLUDING REMARKS REFERENCES; Chapter 3 Measures of Text Entry Performance; 3.1 INTRODUCTION; 3.2 AGGREGATE MEASURES; 3.3 CHARACTER-LEVEL MEASURES; 3.4 MEASUREMENTS FROM LOG FILES; 3.5 METHOD-SPECIFIC MEASURES; 3.6 DISCUSSION OF MEASURES; 3.7 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 4 Evaluation of Text Entry Techniques; 4.1 INTRODUCTION; 4.2 COMPARATIVE EVALUATION OF TEXT ENTRY TECHNIQUES; 4.3 EXPERIMENT DESIGN; 4.4 LEARNING; 4.5 SUMMARY AND FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Part 2 Entry Modalities and Devices; Chapter 5 Text Entry Using a Small Number of Buttons; 5.1 INTRODUCTION
5.2 MOBILE PHONE KEYPAD AND ENTRY METHODS 5.3 CHARACTERISTIC MEASURES FOR AMBIGUOUS KEYBOARDS; 5.4 MOBILE PHONE KEYPAD VARIANTS; 5.5 EVALUATING KEYBOARDS; 5.6 ENTRY BY COMPLETION; 5.7 SUMMARY AND FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 6 English Language Handwriting Recognition Interfaces; 6.1 INTRODUCTION; 6.2 OFFLINE HANDWRITING RECOGNITION; 6.3 ONLINE HANDWRITING RECOGNITION; 6.4 SHORTHAND; 6.5 COMMERCIAL ONLINE SYSTEMS; 6.6 CASE STUDY; 6.7 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 7 Introduction to Shape Writing; 7.1 INTRODUCTION; 7.2 THE BASIC CONCEPT OF SHAPE WRITING
7.3 INFORMATION AND CONSTRAINTS 7.4 SHAPE-WRITING RECOGNITION; 7.5 OUT-OF-LEXICON INPUT, AMBIGUITY, AND ERROR HANDLING; 7.6 HUMAN SENSITIVITY TO SHAPE AS AN ENCODING MODALITY AND THE PROGRESSION FROM TRACING TO DIRECT SHAPE WRITING; 7.7 EFFICIENCY AND LAYOUT MATTERS; 7.8 THE MULTIPLE DIMENSIONS AND GUIDELINES OF EFFICIENT TEXT ENTRY; 7.9 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 8 Speech-Based Interfaces; 8.1 INTRODUCTION; 8.2 CATEGORIES OF SPEECH RECOGNITION TASKS; 8.3 PRINCIPLES OF SPEECH RECOGNITION; 8.4 DICTATION SYSTEMS AND THEIR DIFFICULTIES; 8.5 SPOKEN DIALOGUE SYSTEMS AND THEIR DIFFICULTIES
8.6 EVALUATION OF SPEECH-BASED INPUT SYSTEMS 8.7 CONCLUSION; REFERENCES; Chapter 9 Text Entry by Gaze: Utilizing Eye Tracking; 9.1 INTRODUCTION; 9.2 DIFFERENT APPROACHES TO TEXT ENTRY BY GAZE; 9.3 CASE STUDIES AND GUIDELINES; 9.4 FURTHER READING; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Part 3 Language Variations; Chapter 10 Writing System Variation and Text Entry; 10.1 INTRODUCTION; 10.2 VARIATION IN WRITING SYSTEMS; 10.3 TEXT ENTRY PROBLEMS IN DIFFERENT WRITING SYSTEMS; 10.4 ALPHABETIC SCRIPTS; 10.5 CONCLUDING REMARKS; 10.6 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 11 Text Entry in East Asian Languages
11.1 INTRODUCTION
Record Nr. UNINA-9910458108603321
MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->  
Amsterdam, : Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann, c2007
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Text entry systems [[electronic resource] ] : mobility, accessibility, universality / / edited by I. Scott MacKenzie and Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii
Text entry systems [[electronic resource] ] : mobility, accessibility, universality / / edited by I. Scott MacKenzie and Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii
Autore MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam, : Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann, c2007
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (343 p.)
Disciplina 004
004 22
Altri autori (Persone) Tanaka-IshiiKumiko
Collana The Morgan Kaufmann series in interactive technologies
Soggetto topico Computers
Electronic data processing - Data entry
Human-computer interaction
Natural language processing (Computer science)
ISBN 1-281-05354-6
9786611053543
0-08-048979-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Text Entry Systems: Mobility, Accessibility, Universality; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface: Variety and Universality; Part 1 Foundations; Chapter 1 Historical Overview of Consumer Text Entry Technologies; 1.1 INTRODUCTION; 1.2 TYPEWRITER, 1870's TO 1980's; 1.3 PERSONAL COMPUTER, 1980's TO PRESENT; 1.4 MOBILE PHONES, 1990's TO PRESENT; 1.5 HANDHELD COMPUTERS; 1.6 CONCLUSIONS; 1.7 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 2 Language Models for Text Entry; 2.1 INTRODUCTION; 2.2 BASIC MODEL OF TEXT ENTRY; 2.3 N-GRAM MODELS; 2.4 HIDDEN MARKOV MODEL; 2.5 ADAPTIVE MODELS
2.6 CONCLUDING REMARKS REFERENCES; Chapter 3 Measures of Text Entry Performance; 3.1 INTRODUCTION; 3.2 AGGREGATE MEASURES; 3.3 CHARACTER-LEVEL MEASURES; 3.4 MEASUREMENTS FROM LOG FILES; 3.5 METHOD-SPECIFIC MEASURES; 3.6 DISCUSSION OF MEASURES; 3.7 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 4 Evaluation of Text Entry Techniques; 4.1 INTRODUCTION; 4.2 COMPARATIVE EVALUATION OF TEXT ENTRY TECHNIQUES; 4.3 EXPERIMENT DESIGN; 4.4 LEARNING; 4.5 SUMMARY AND FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Part 2 Entry Modalities and Devices; Chapter 5 Text Entry Using a Small Number of Buttons; 5.1 INTRODUCTION
5.2 MOBILE PHONE KEYPAD AND ENTRY METHODS 5.3 CHARACTERISTIC MEASURES FOR AMBIGUOUS KEYBOARDS; 5.4 MOBILE PHONE KEYPAD VARIANTS; 5.5 EVALUATING KEYBOARDS; 5.6 ENTRY BY COMPLETION; 5.7 SUMMARY AND FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 6 English Language Handwriting Recognition Interfaces; 6.1 INTRODUCTION; 6.2 OFFLINE HANDWRITING RECOGNITION; 6.3 ONLINE HANDWRITING RECOGNITION; 6.4 SHORTHAND; 6.5 COMMERCIAL ONLINE SYSTEMS; 6.6 CASE STUDY; 6.7 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 7 Introduction to Shape Writing; 7.1 INTRODUCTION; 7.2 THE BASIC CONCEPT OF SHAPE WRITING
7.3 INFORMATION AND CONSTRAINTS 7.4 SHAPE-WRITING RECOGNITION; 7.5 OUT-OF-LEXICON INPUT, AMBIGUITY, AND ERROR HANDLING; 7.6 HUMAN SENSITIVITY TO SHAPE AS AN ENCODING MODALITY AND THE PROGRESSION FROM TRACING TO DIRECT SHAPE WRITING; 7.7 EFFICIENCY AND LAYOUT MATTERS; 7.8 THE MULTIPLE DIMENSIONS AND GUIDELINES OF EFFICIENT TEXT ENTRY; 7.9 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 8 Speech-Based Interfaces; 8.1 INTRODUCTION; 8.2 CATEGORIES OF SPEECH RECOGNITION TASKS; 8.3 PRINCIPLES OF SPEECH RECOGNITION; 8.4 DICTATION SYSTEMS AND THEIR DIFFICULTIES; 8.5 SPOKEN DIALOGUE SYSTEMS AND THEIR DIFFICULTIES
8.6 EVALUATION OF SPEECH-BASED INPUT SYSTEMS 8.7 CONCLUSION; REFERENCES; Chapter 9 Text Entry by Gaze: Utilizing Eye Tracking; 9.1 INTRODUCTION; 9.2 DIFFERENT APPROACHES TO TEXT ENTRY BY GAZE; 9.3 CASE STUDIES AND GUIDELINES; 9.4 FURTHER READING; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Part 3 Language Variations; Chapter 10 Writing System Variation and Text Entry; 10.1 INTRODUCTION; 10.2 VARIATION IN WRITING SYSTEMS; 10.3 TEXT ENTRY PROBLEMS IN DIFFERENT WRITING SYSTEMS; 10.4 ALPHABETIC SCRIPTS; 10.5 CONCLUDING REMARKS; 10.6 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 11 Text Entry in East Asian Languages
11.1 INTRODUCTION
Record Nr. UNINA-9910784657003321
MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->  
Amsterdam, : Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann, c2007
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Text entry systems : mobility, accessibility, universality / / edited by I. Scott MacKenzie and Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii
Text entry systems : mobility, accessibility, universality / / edited by I. Scott MacKenzie and Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii
Autore MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam, : Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann, c2007
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (343 p.)
Disciplina 004
004 22
Altri autori (Persone) Tanaka-IshiiKumiko
Collana The Morgan Kaufmann series in interactive technologies
Soggetto topico Computers
Electronic data processing - Data entry
Human-computer interaction
Natural language processing (Computer science)
ISBN 1-281-05354-6
9786611053543
0-08-048979-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Text Entry Systems: Mobility, Accessibility, Universality; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface: Variety and Universality; Part 1 Foundations; Chapter 1 Historical Overview of Consumer Text Entry Technologies; 1.1 INTRODUCTION; 1.2 TYPEWRITER, 1870's TO 1980's; 1.3 PERSONAL COMPUTER, 1980's TO PRESENT; 1.4 MOBILE PHONES, 1990's TO PRESENT; 1.5 HANDHELD COMPUTERS; 1.6 CONCLUSIONS; 1.7 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 2 Language Models for Text Entry; 2.1 INTRODUCTION; 2.2 BASIC MODEL OF TEXT ENTRY; 2.3 N-GRAM MODELS; 2.4 HIDDEN MARKOV MODEL; 2.5 ADAPTIVE MODELS
2.6 CONCLUDING REMARKS REFERENCES; Chapter 3 Measures of Text Entry Performance; 3.1 INTRODUCTION; 3.2 AGGREGATE MEASURES; 3.3 CHARACTER-LEVEL MEASURES; 3.4 MEASUREMENTS FROM LOG FILES; 3.5 METHOD-SPECIFIC MEASURES; 3.6 DISCUSSION OF MEASURES; 3.7 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 4 Evaluation of Text Entry Techniques; 4.1 INTRODUCTION; 4.2 COMPARATIVE EVALUATION OF TEXT ENTRY TECHNIQUES; 4.3 EXPERIMENT DESIGN; 4.4 LEARNING; 4.5 SUMMARY AND FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Part 2 Entry Modalities and Devices; Chapter 5 Text Entry Using a Small Number of Buttons; 5.1 INTRODUCTION
5.2 MOBILE PHONE KEYPAD AND ENTRY METHODS 5.3 CHARACTERISTIC MEASURES FOR AMBIGUOUS KEYBOARDS; 5.4 MOBILE PHONE KEYPAD VARIANTS; 5.5 EVALUATING KEYBOARDS; 5.6 ENTRY BY COMPLETION; 5.7 SUMMARY AND FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 6 English Language Handwriting Recognition Interfaces; 6.1 INTRODUCTION; 6.2 OFFLINE HANDWRITING RECOGNITION; 6.3 ONLINE HANDWRITING RECOGNITION; 6.4 SHORTHAND; 6.5 COMMERCIAL ONLINE SYSTEMS; 6.6 CASE STUDY; 6.7 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 7 Introduction to Shape Writing; 7.1 INTRODUCTION; 7.2 THE BASIC CONCEPT OF SHAPE WRITING
7.3 INFORMATION AND CONSTRAINTS 7.4 SHAPE-WRITING RECOGNITION; 7.5 OUT-OF-LEXICON INPUT, AMBIGUITY, AND ERROR HANDLING; 7.6 HUMAN SENSITIVITY TO SHAPE AS AN ENCODING MODALITY AND THE PROGRESSION FROM TRACING TO DIRECT SHAPE WRITING; 7.7 EFFICIENCY AND LAYOUT MATTERS; 7.8 THE MULTIPLE DIMENSIONS AND GUIDELINES OF EFFICIENT TEXT ENTRY; 7.9 FURTHER READING; REFERENCES; Chapter 8 Speech-Based Interfaces; 8.1 INTRODUCTION; 8.2 CATEGORIES OF SPEECH RECOGNITION TASKS; 8.3 PRINCIPLES OF SPEECH RECOGNITION; 8.4 DICTATION SYSTEMS AND THEIR DIFFICULTIES; 8.5 SPOKEN DIALOGUE SYSTEMS AND THEIR DIFFICULTIES
8.6 EVALUATION OF SPEECH-BASED INPUT SYSTEMS 8.7 CONCLUSION; REFERENCES; Chapter 9 Text Entry by Gaze: Utilizing Eye Tracking; 9.1 INTRODUCTION; 9.2 DIFFERENT APPROACHES TO TEXT ENTRY BY GAZE; 9.3 CASE STUDIES AND GUIDELINES; 9.4 FURTHER READING; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Part 3 Language Variations; Chapter 10 Writing System Variation and Text Entry; 10.1 INTRODUCTION; 10.2 VARIATION IN WRITING SYSTEMS; 10.3 TEXT ENTRY PROBLEMS IN DIFFERENT WRITING SYSTEMS; 10.4 ALPHABETIC SCRIPTS; 10.5 CONCLUDING REMARKS; 10.6 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 11 Text Entry in East Asian Languages
11.1 INTRODUCTION
Record Nr. UNINA-9910822799903321
MacKenzie I. Scott <1951->  
Amsterdam, : Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann, c2007
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui