ACM SIGCAPH Computers and the Physically Handicapped
SHK: single hand key card for mobile devices
Conference Companion on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Target-Text Mediated Interactive Machine Translation
Machine Translation
Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
Individually Assisted Text Entry with Situational and Contextual Prediction
ICCHP '02 Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Computers Helping People with Special Needs
User Interface Aspects of a Translation Typing System
AI '01 Proceedings of the 14th Biennial Conference of the Canadian Society on Computational Studies of Intelligence: Advances in Artificial Intelligence
Trans Type: Development-Evaluation Cycles to Boost Translator's Productivity
Machine Translation
Error-Tolerant Sign Retrieval Using Visual Features and Maximum A Posteriori Estimation
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
Proceedings of the 27th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
Mobile devices: soft keyboard text-entry enhanced by Visual Cues
UbiMob '04 Proceedings of the 1st French-speaking conference on Mobility and ubiquity computing
Towards an adaptive communication aid with text input from ambiguous keyboards
EACL '03 Proceedings of the tenth conference on European chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics - Volume 2
Predicting sentences using N-gram language models
HLT '05 Proceedings of the conference on Human Language Technology and Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Word-based predictive text entry using adaptive language models
Natural Language Engineering
Text Entry Systems: Mobility, Accessibility, Universality
Text Entry Systems: Mobility, Accessibility, Universality
Text Entry System Based on a Minimal Scan Matrix for Severely Physically Handicapped People
ICCHP '08 Proceedings of the 11th international conference on Computers Helping People with Special Needs
Text entry in the e-commerce age: two proposals for the severely handicapped
Journal of Theoretical and Applied Electronic Commerce Research
BlinkWrite2: an improved text entry method using eye blinks
Proceedings of the 2010 Symposium on Eye-Tracking Research & Applications
Organizing query completions for web search
CIKM '10 Proceedings of the 19th ACM international conference on Information and knowledge management
Towards a one-way American sign language translator
FGR' 04 Proceedings of the Sixth IEEE international conference on Automatic face and gesture recognition
Recognizing song-based blink patterns: applications for restricted and universal access
FGR' 04 Proceedings of the Sixth IEEE international conference on Automatic face and gesture recognition
Learning to complete sentences
ECML'05 Proceedings of the 16th European conference on Machine Learning
Evaluation of an ambiguous-keyboard prototype scanning-system with word and character disambiguation
BCS '10 Proceedings of the 24th BCS Interaction Specialist Group Conference
Text entry by gazing and smiling
Advances in Human-Computer Interaction
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From the Publisher:Extremely slow communication is a daily reality for many people with different forms of physical disability. Modern computer interfaces can be designed to enhance expressive communication. This is accomplished first by supplying facilities to tailor them to each particular user's residual physical disabilities, and second by automatically supplying much of the redundancy inherent in natural communication. In the first part of this book a functional architecture for communication aids is discussed and the idea of automatically supplying the intrinsic redundancy contained in natural communication is explained. The distinctions between adaptive and non-adaptive models of communication are shown and details are given of working predictive text generation systems. One such system is the Reactive Keyboard, and in the second part of the book this is described. It greatly speeds communication by predicting the user's next response before it is made, although it does not always predict correctly. The guesses are made on the basis of previous answers and thus can conform to whatever kind of text is entered. Versions of the Reactive Keyboard exist for Unix, IBM PC, and Macintosh systems, free of charge, and can be tailored to individual user needs. This book will be of great value to all involved in helping disabled users interact with computers.