17 September 2014
description
Transcript of 17 September 2014
stanford hci group
April 21, 2023
CINCH
David David AkersAkers
a cooperatively designed marking interface for 3D pathway selection
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The Human Brain
white matter
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Estimated Pathways
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Pathway Selection
DTI-Query [Akers et al. 2004, Sherbondy, et al. 2005]
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Backgroundbrain imaging and pathway selection
Design ProcessWizard of Oz prototype
The CINCH Systemdemonstration and implementation details
Design Implicationsreflections on design process
Outline
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Touch
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Shape Match
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An Interface Design Quandary
How to develop a marking language that is both:
Useful to scientists (solves their selection problems)
Intuitive to scientists (matches their mental model)
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Whiteboard ExplorationsWhiteboard Explorations
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Wizard of Oz Prototype
Scientists invent their own marking operations
Wizard modeUser mode
Designer simulates the effects, using a crude but functional interface
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Wizard of Oz Prototype
[ Live Demo ]
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Marking Operations Invented
shape matching touch surface intersection
Selection modes: Add, Remove, Intersect
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Design Principles
Minimality Remove unnecessary parameters whenever possible.
Visibility Marks should only affect pathways on the visible
side of each cutting plane.
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The CINCH Interface
[ Demo Video ]
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The CINCH Interface
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Details: Shape Match
3D pathway (projected)
Gestural mark
Distance metric: Mean closest points
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Details: Grow/Shrink
Distance to selection
5.87
7.89
10.23
15.58
16.8
17.5
18.5Distance matrix
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Related Work3D modeling interfaces
Sketch [Zeleznik et al. 1996]
Teddy [Igarashi et al. 1999]
3D selection interfaces
SenseShapes [Olwal et al. 1999]
Volume Catcher [Owada et al. 2003]
Participatory design
Cooperative Prototyping [Bødker and Grønbæk 1989]
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CINCH In Use
CINCH was evaluated using:
Event logs
Screen Captures
Interviews
Scientists self-reported 2-5 times speedup when using CINCH.
CINCH has been adopted and is being used actively.
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Final Thoughts
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AcknowledgmentsComputer Science
Scott Klemmer (Stanford U.)Tomer Moscovich (Brown U.)
NeuroscienceBrian Wandell (Stanford U.) All the participants in our experiments
SponsorsNIH (EY003164 - 26)Charles A. Dana Foundation (5-38267.574.1)