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Hosseini, Masoumehsadat; Ihmels, Tjado; Chen, Ziqian; Koelle, Marion; Müller, Heiko; Boll, Susanne
Towards a Consensus Gesture Set: A Survey of Mid-Air Gestures in HCI for Maximized Agreement Across Domains Proceedings Article
In: Proceedings of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, Association for Computing Machinery, <conf-loc>, <city>Hamburg</city>, <country>Germany</country>, </conf-loc>, 2023, ISBN: 9781450394215.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: agreement rate, application domain, Mid-air gestures, systematic literature review
@inproceedings{10.1145/3544548.3581420,
title = {Towards a Consensus Gesture Set: A Survey of Mid-Air Gestures in HCI for Maximized Agreement Across Domains},
author = {Masoumehsadat Hosseini and Tjado Ihmels and Ziqian Chen and Marion Koelle and Heiko Müller and Susanne Boll},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3544548.3581420},
doi = {10.1145/3544548.3581420},
isbn = {9781450394215},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-01-01},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {<conf-loc>, <city>Hamburg</city>, <country>Germany</country>, </conf-loc>},
series = {CHI '23},
abstract = {Mid-air gesture-based systems are becoming ubiquitous. Many mid-air gestures control different kinds of interactive devices, applications, and systems. They are, however, still targeted at specific devices in specific domains and are not necessarily consistent across domain boundaries. A comprehensive evaluation of the transferability of gesture vocabulary between domains is also lacking. Consequently, interaction designers cannot decide which gestures to use for which domain. In this systematic literature review, we contribute to the future research agenda in this area, based on an analysis of 172 papers. As part of our analysis, we clustered gestures according to the dimensions of an existing taxonomy to identify their common characteristics in different domains, and we investigated the extent to which existing mid-air gesture sets are consistent across different domains. We derived a consensus gesture set containing 22 gestures based on agreement rates calculation and considered their transferability across different domains.},
keywords = {agreement rate, application domain, Mid-air gestures, systematic literature review},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Mid-air gesture-based systems are becoming ubiquitous. Many mid-air gestures control different kinds of interactive devices, applications, and systems. They are, however, still targeted at specific devices in specific domains and are not necessarily consistent across domain boundaries. A comprehensive evaluation of the transferability of gesture vocabulary between domains is also lacking. Consequently, interaction designers cannot decide which gestures to use for which domain. In this systematic literature review, we contribute to the future research agenda in this area, based on an analysis of 172 papers. As part of our analysis, we clustered gestures according to the dimensions of an existing taxonomy to identify their common characteristics in different domains, and we investigated the extent to which existing mid-air gesture sets are consistent across different domains. We derived a consensus gesture set containing 22 gestures based on agreement rates calculation and considered their transferability across different domains.