FingerGlass: Efficient Multiscale Interaction on Multitouch Screens

May 7th, 2011 | RESEARCH

Many tasks in graphical user interfaces require users to interact with elements at various levels of precision. We present FingerGlass, a bimanual technique designed to improve the precision of graphical tasks on multitouch screens. It enables users to quickly navigate to different locations and across multiple scales of a scene using a single hand. The other hand can simultaneously interact with objects in the scene. Unlike traditional pan-zoom interfaces, FingerGlass retains contextual information during the interaction. We evaluated our technique in the context of precise object selection and translation and found that FingerGlass significantly outperforms three state-of-the-art baseline techniques in both objective and subjective measurements: users acquired and translated targets more than 50% faster than with the second best technique in our experiment.

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Team Members

Dominik K¨aser, Author, University of California, Berkeley
Maneesh Agrawala, Author, University of California, Berkeley
Mark Pauly, Author, EPFL

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Audience: Evaluators | Museum | ISE Professionals | Scientists
Discipline: Computing and information science | Education and learning science
Resource Type: Reference Materials | Report