• DocumentCode
    76786
  • Title

    Touchscreen Everywhere: On Transferring a Normal Planar Surface to a Touch-Sensitive Display

  • Author

    Jingwen Dai ; Chung, Chi-kit Ronald

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA
  • Volume
    44
  • Issue
    8
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Aug. 2014
  • Firstpage
    1383
  • Lastpage
    1396
  • Abstract
    We address how a human-computer interface with small device size, large display, and touch-input facility can be made possible by a mere projector and camera. The realization is through the use of a properly embedded structured light sensing scheme that enables a regular light-colored table surface to serve the dual roles of both a projection screen and a touch-sensitive display surface. A random binary pattern is employed to code structured light in pixel accuracy, which is embedded into the regular projection display in a way that the user perceives only regular display but not the structured pattern hidden in the display. With the projection display on the table surface being imaged by a camera, the observed image data, plus the known projection content, can work together to probe the 3-D workspace immediately above the table surface, like deciding if there is a finger present and if the finger touches the table surface, and if so, at what position on the table surface the contact is made. All the decisions hinge upon a careful calibration of the projector-camera-table surface system, intelligent segmentation of the hand in the image data, and exploitation of the homography mapping existing between the projector´s display panel and the camera´s image plane. Extensive experimentation including evaluation of the display quality, hand segmentation accuracy, touch detection accuracy, trajectory tracking accuracy, multitouch capability and system efficiency are shown to illustrate the feasibility of the proposed realization.
  • Keywords
    cameras; human computer interaction; image segmentation; touch sensitive screens; user interfaces; 3-D workspace; camera image plane; embedded structured light sensing scheme; homography mapping; human-computer interface; intelligent hand segmentation; light-colored table surface; multitouch capability; projection display; projection screen; projector display panel; projector-camera-table surface system; random binary pattern; touch detection; touch-sensitive display surface; touchscreen; trajectory tracking; Accuracy; Arrays; Cameras; Computers; Encoding; Image segmentation; Sensors; Accuracy evaluation; hand segmentation; homography; imperceptible structured light embedding; touch detection; touch-sensitive display;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Cybernetics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    2168-2267
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TCYB.2013.2284512
  • Filename
    6651770