EarRumble: Discreet Hands- and Eyes-Free Input by Voluntary Tensor Tympani Muscle Contraction
Tobias Röddiger, Christopher Clarke, Daniel Wolffram, Matthias Budde, Michael Beigl
CHI '21: The 2021 ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Session: Input / Spatial Interaction / Practice Support
Abstract
We explore how discreet input can be provided using the tensor tympani - a small muscle in the middle ear that some people can voluntarily contract to induce a dull rumbling sound. We investigate the prevalence and ability to control the muscle through an online questionnaire (N=192) in which 43.2% of respondents reported the ability to "ear rumble". Data collected from participants (N=16) shows how in-ear barometry can be used to detect voluntary tensor tympani contraction in the sealed ear canal. This data was used to train a classifier based on three simple ear rumble "gestures" which achieved 95% accuracy. Finally, we evaluate the use of ear rumbling for interaction, grounded in three manual, dual-task application scenarios (N=8). This highlights the applicability of EarRumble as a low-effort and discreet eyes- and hands-free interaction technique that users found "magical" and "almost telepathic".
DOI:: [ Ссылка ]
WEB:: [ Ссылка ]
Pre-recorded Presentations for the ACM CHI Virtual Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, May 8-13, 2021
Ещё видео!