UbiSurface: A Robotic Touch Surface for Supporting Mid-air Planar Interactions in Room-Scale VR

Room-scale VR has been considered an alternative to physical office workspaces. For office activities, users frequently require planar input methods, such as typing or handwriting, to quickly record annotations to virtual content. However, current off-the-shelf VR HMD setups rely on mid-air interact...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the ACM on human-computer interaction 2023-10, Vol.7 (ISS), p.376-397, Article 443
Hauptverfasser: Gomi, Ryota, Takashima, Kazuki, Onishi, Yuki, Fujita, Kazuyuki, Kitamura, Yoshifumi
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container_end_page 397
container_issue ISS
container_start_page 376
container_title Proceedings of the ACM on human-computer interaction
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creator Gomi, Ryota
Takashima, Kazuki
Onishi, Yuki
Fujita, Kazuyuki
Kitamura, Yoshifumi
description Room-scale VR has been considered an alternative to physical office workspaces. For office activities, users frequently require planar input methods, such as typing or handwriting, to quickly record annotations to virtual content. However, current off-the-shelf VR HMD setups rely on mid-air interactions, which can cause arm fatigue and decrease input accuracy. To address this issue, we propose UbiSurface, a robotic touch surface that can automatically reposition itself to physically present a virtual planar input surface (VR whiteboard, VR canvas, etc.) to users and to permit them to achieve accurate and fatigue-less input while walking around a virtual room. We design and implement a prototype of UbiSurface that can dynamically change a canvas-sized touch surface's position, height, and pitch and yaw angles to adapt to virtual surfaces spatially arranged at various locations and angles around a virtual room. We then conduct studies to validate its technical performance and examine how UbiSurface facilitates the user's primary mid-air planar interactions, such as painting and writing in a room-scale VR setup. Our results indicate that this system reduces arm fatigue and increases input accuracy, especially for writing tasks. We then discuss the potential benefits and challenges of robotic touch devices for future room-scale VR setups.
doi_str_mv 10.1145/3626479
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subjects Human-centered computing
Mixed / augmented reality
title UbiSurface: A Robotic Touch Surface for Supporting Mid-air Planar Interactions in Room-Scale VR
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