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Combining Diffuse Illumination and Frustrated Total Internal Reflection for touch detection - Andreas Holzammer
[1]
- © Andreas Holzammer
These days new interaction methods with the
computer are getting more
important. One way is to use a multi
touch surface, this means the user can use
more than one finger
to control the computer. Two optical techniques are Frustrated Total
Internal Reflection~(FTIR) and Diffuse Illumination~(DI). FTIR is
using the physical effect of total internal reflection to generate
blobs on a camera image if a
finger is touching the surface. DI
uses a diffuse surface to generate camera
pictures that have
only the hands clearly on them. Both of these techniques use
infrared light sources so the user would not see them when
interacting with the
surface. The main idea of the thesis is, to
combine FTIR and DI to enhance the
manual interaction between
multi touch surfaces and the user as seen in
the image. FTIR can
be used to determine whether a finger is touching the surface, but
this technique can not be used to determine if specific touches belong
together~(fingers of a hand). DI can be used to find a silhouette of
the hand and therefore touches can be recognized as a hand. But with
DI, it is hard to determine if a finger is really touching the
surface. As we want to exploit the advantages of both techniques, we
combine them in the following manner. We take the silhouette of the
hand~(taken from DI image) and overlay it with the blobs~(taken from
FTIR
image). The technique of using reference images(Ref) to
suppress the ambient
infrared light is used, which is described
here [2]. This combination should enhance the interaction with the
computer, therefore a investigation is done whether the single
techniques work better or the combination is a better. With the
combination functions can be described for each finger of a hand, also
it can be determined which hand is used(left or right). This
information can be used to describe new gestures. It can be
approximated how many users are working on this surface by counting
hands(left and right).
A piece of software is developed to
track the manual interaction with the multi
touch interface.
Therefore the software, which is called from now on tracker,
controls a digital camera that takes FTIR and DI images alternating.
To
suppress the ambient light that is coming from the
environment a reference
image is taken from time to time and the
reference image is subtracted by the
FTIR/DI images. These
images are filtered and combined to get images that can
be
analyzed. The position, rotation and distance of finger and hands on
the
surface are estimated from that images. The gathered
information is sent to a
client, which is interpreting this
information to control user programs.
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