April 29, 2010

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Cell Phones Using Gesture Control (w/ Video)

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(PhysOrg.com) -- The next generation of cell phone interfaces is currently under development at Ishikawa Komuro Laboratory at the University of Tokyo but instead of using a touchscreen the new interface is touchless.

This new technology will use a high-speed on the to track user finger movements and . The advantage to this type of interface is that movements and gestures are only limited by the camera’s field of vision.

A gesture that is similar to clicking a mouse button is defined as a movement towards the camera’s optical axis. This detection uses a frequency filter that is applied to a scale change in the fingertip image. This technique would also used for typing, selecting and zooming in-and-out on images without ever touching the screen.

The hardware that makes all this possible is a system which performs 3D motion tracking of human's hand and fingers from images of a single high-frame-rate camera and that recognizes typing motion in the air. The use of a high-frame-rate camera enables recognition of rapid typing motion that would otherwise be difficult to track using standard cameras.

Touchless Keyboard
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Touchless Keyboard
Touchless Scrolling
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Touchless Scrolling

In order for the camera to recognize real-time recognition, Ishikawa Komuro Laboratory developed hardware which parallelizes and accelerates image processing. They were able to achieve real-time recognition of typing motion with a throughput of 138 fps and a latency of 29 ms.

Ishikawa Komuro Laboratory hopes to commercialize their technology in the near future. There has been no mention of when this product will be available to consumers.

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