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PerDis 2013: Mountain View, CA, USA
- Bill N. Schilit, Roy Want, Timo Ojala:
The International Symposium on Pervasive Displays, PerDis '13, Mountain View, CA, USA - June 04 - 05, 2013. ACM 2013, ISBN 978-1-4503-2096-2
Proxemic interaction
- Jakub Dostal, Per Ola Kristensson, Aaron J. Quigley:
Multi-view proxemics: distance and position sensitive interaction. 1-6 - Marko Jurmu, Masaki Ogawa, Sebastian Boring, Jukka Riekki, Hideyuki Tokuda:
Waving to a touch interface: descriptive field study of a multipurpose multimodal public display. 7-12 - Florian Alt, Stefan Schneegass, Michael Girgis, Albrecht Schmidt:
Cognitive effects of interactive public display applications. 13-18 - Kazjon Grace, Rainer Wasinger, Christopher James Ackad, Anthony Collins, Oliver Dawson, Richard Gluga, Judy Kay, Martin Tomitsch:
Conveying interactivity at an interactive public information display. 19-24
Applications
- Sarah Clinch, Nigel Davies, Adrian Friday, Graham Clinch:
Yarely: a software player for open pervasive display networks. 25-30 - Simo Hosio, Jorge Gonçalves, Vassilis Kostakos:
Application discoverability on multipurpose public displays: popularity comes at a price. 31-36 - Haeyong Chung, Sharon Lynn Chu, Chris North:
A comparison of two display models for collaborative sensemaking. 37-42 - Björn Hartmann, Michel Beaudouin-Lafon, Wendy E. Mackay:
HydraScope: creating multi-surface meta-applications through view synchronization and input multiplexing. 43-48
Projection and 3D
- Jürgen Scheible, Achim Hoth, Julian Saal, Haifeng Su:
Displaydrone: a flying robot based interactive display. 49-54 - Rouien Zarin, Nicholas True, Nigel Papworth, Kent Lindbergh, Daniel Fallman:
Be green: implementing an interactive, cylindrical display in the real world. 55-60 - Nora Broy, Florian Alt, Stefan Schneegass, Niels Henze, Albrecht Schmidt:
Perceiving layered information on 3D displays using binocular disparity. 61-66 - Hans William Falck, Kim Halskov:
Towards a framework for projection installations. 67-72
Architecture and space
- Nick Sheep Dalton, Paul Marshall, Ruth Conroy Dalton:
Extending architectural theories of space syntax to understand the effect of environment on the salience of situated displays. 73-78 - Moritz Behrens, Ava Fatah gen. Schieck, Efstathia Kostopoulou, Steve North, Wallis Motta, Lei Ye, Holger Schnädelbach:
Exploring the effect of spatial layout on mediated urban interactions. 79-84 - Jonna Häkkilä, Olli Koskenranta, Maaret Posti, Leena Ventä-Olkkonen, Ashley Colley:
Clearing the virtual window: connecting two locations with interactive public displays. 85-90 - Claude Fortin, Kate Hennessy, Ruedi Baur, Pierre Fortin:
Beyond the vision paradigm: design strategies for crossmodal interaction with dynamic digital displays. 91-96
Mobile interaction
- Rui José, Jorge C. S. Cardoso, Florian Alt, Sarah Clinch, Nigel Davies:
Mobile applications for open display networks: common design considerations. 97-102 - Matthias Geel, Daniel Huguenin, Moira C. Norrie:
PresiShare: opportunistic sharing and presentation of content using public displays and QR codes. 103-108 - Petri Luojus, Jarkko Koskela, Kimmo Ollila, Saku-Matti Mäki, Raffi Kulpa-Bogossia, Tommi Heikkinen, Timo Ojala:
Wordster: collaborative versus competitive gaming using interactive public displays and mobile phones. 109-114 - Sven Gehring, Christian Lander:
GPS lens: GPS based controlling of pointers on large-scale urban displays using mobile devices. 115-120
Users and communities
- Niels Wouters, Jonathan Huyghe, Andrew Vande Moere:
OpenWindow: citizen-controlled content on public displays. 121-126 - Nemanja Memarovic, Keith Cheverst, Marc Langheinrich, Ivan Elhart, Florian Alt:
Tethered or free to roam: the design space of limiting content access on community displays. 127-132 - Sandy Claes, Andrew Vande Moere:
Street infographics: raising awareness of local issues through a situated urban visualization. 133-138 - Marc Langheinrich, Albrecht Schmidt, Nigel Davies, Rui José:
A practical framework for ethics: the PD-net approach to supporting ethics compliance in public display studies. 139-143
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