Employing Electrical Field Sensing for Detecting Static Thumb Position Using the Finger-Joint Gesture Keypad Input Paradigm

  • Authors:
  • Mikael Goldstein;Orlando Baez;Peter Danielsson

  • Affiliations:
  • -;-;-

  • Venue:
  • ISWC '00 Proceedings of the 4th IEEE International Symposium on Wearable Computers
  • Year:
  • 2000

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Abstract

A wearable ubiquitous fragmentized mobile terminal concept, the Finger-Joint Gesture Keypad paradigm (FJGK), utilizing the 12 finger phalanges as telephone keypad keys and the thumb as operator, was implemented in a prototype. Isolated digit-gesture recognition of the static thumb position of the 12-character telephone keypad vocabulary (1-9, (, 0 and #) entered 50 times without replacement by a single user was recorded using electric field sensing. A simple threshold-based algorithm for classifying the various channel-input readings was used. Mean detection rate was 78% for a 4-channel electrode configuration where the electrodes were placed next to each other in one plane. Character detection rates varied between 18-100%. Detection rates were lowest for digit 5 (18%), 2 (50%) and 6 (66%). In a context where portability issues are at stake, the FJGK ubiquitous terminal concept may provide a viable alternative.