 |
 |
 | TEXT ENTRY SYSTEMS
|  |
 |  |  |
 |
 |
Mobility, Accessibility, Universality
To order this title, and for more information, click here
By
I. Scott MacKenzie, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
Description
Text entry has never been so important as it is today. This is in large part due to the phenomenal, relatively recent success of mobile
computing, text messaging on mobile phones, and the proliferation of small devices like the Blackberry and Palm Pilot. Compared with
the recent past, when text entry was primarily through the standard ?qwerty? keyboard, people today use a diverse array of devices with
the number and variety of such devices ever increasing.
The variety is not just in the devices, but also in the technologies used:
Entry modalities have become more varied and include speech recognition and synthesis, handwriting recognition, and even eye-tracking
using image processing on web-cams. Statistical language modeling has advanced greatly in the past ten years and so therein is potential
to facilitate and improve text entry?increasingly, the way people communicate.
This book consists of four parts, and covers these
areas: Guidelines for Designing Better Entry Systems (including research methodologies, measurement, and language modelling); Devices
and Modalities; Languages of the world and entry systems in those languages; and variety in users and their difficulties with text entry?and
the possible design and guideline solutions for those individual user groups.
Audience
Interaction design practitioners in: HCI, handwriting and speech recognition, computational linguistics and natural language processing. Also, Grad students, researchers.
Contents
Table of Contents
PREFACE
Current State of the Art in Text Entry -An Overall Remark
Scott MacKenzie and Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii
PART I:
FOUNDATIONS
Chapter 1: Historical Overview of Consumer Text Entry Technologies
Miika Silfverberg
Chapter 2: Language Models For Text
Entry
Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii
Chapter 3: Measures of Text Entry Performance
Jacob Wobbrock
Chapter 4: Evaluation of Text Entry Techniques
Scott MacKenzie
PART 2: ENTRY MODALITIES AND DEVICES
Chapter 5: Text Entry Using a Small Number of Buttons
Scott MacKenzie and Kumiko
Tanaka-Ishii
Chapter 6: Hand Writing Recognition Interfaces
Charles Tappert and Sung-Hyuk Cha
Chapter 7: Introduction to Shape Writing
Shumin Zhai and Per Ola Kristensson
Chapter 8: Speech Based Interfaces
Sadaoki Furui
Chapter 9: Text Entry by Gaze: Utilizing Eye-Tracking
Paivi Majaranta and Kari-Jouko Raiha
PART 3: LANGUAGE VARIATIONS
Chapter 10: Writing System Variations and Text Entry Systems
Kumiko
Tanaka-Ishii and Renu Gupta
Chapter 11: Text Entry for Languages With Ideograms -Chinese, Japanese, Korean-
Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii and
Ming Zhou and Jin-Dong Kim
Chapter 12: Text Entry in South and Southeast Asian Scripts
Renu Gupta and Virach Sornlertlamvanich
Chapter
13: Text Entry in Hebrew and Arabic Scripts
Tsuguya Sasaki and Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii
PART 4: ACCESSIBILITY, UNIVERSALITY
Chapter 14
- Text Entry for the Elderly and the Young
Janet Read
Chapter 15 - Text Entry When the Movement is Impaired
Shari Trewin and John Arnott
Chapter 16 - Entry for the People with Visual Impairements
Chieko Asakawa and Hironobu Takagi
| Bibliographic details |
Paperback, 344 pages, publication date: MAR-2007
ISBN-13: 978-0-12-373591-1
ISBN-10: 0-12-373591-2
Imprint: MORGAN KAUFFMAN
|
| Price and Ordering |
Price:
EUR 39.95 USD 52.95 GBP 34
|  |
Books and book related electronic products are priced in US dollars (USD), euro (EUR), and Great Britain Pounds (GBP). USD prices apply to the Americas and Asia Pacific. EUR prices apply in Europe and the Middle East. GBP prices apply to the UK and all other countries.
|
See also information about conditions of sale & ordering procedures, and links to our regional sales offices.
|
077/748
Last update: 25 Nov 2009
|
 |
|  |
 |  |  |
 |
|
|  |