Gang Wang, Fei Wang, et al.
IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part B: Cybernetics
Dictionary-based disambiguation (DBD) is a very popular solution for text entry on mobile phone keypads but suffers from two problems: 1. the resolution of encoding collision (two or more words sharing the same numeric key sequence) and 2. entering out-of-vocabulary (OOV) words. In this paper, we present SHRIMP, a system and method that addresses these two problems by integrating DBD with camera based motion sensing that enables the user to express preference through a tilting or movement gesture. SHRIMP (Small Handheld Rapid Input with Motion and Prediction) runs on camera phones equipped with a standard 12-key keypad. SHRIMP maintains the speed advantage of DBD driven predictive text input while enabling the user to overcome DBD collision and OOV problems seamlessly without even a mode switch. An initial empirical study demonstrates that SHRIMP can be learned very quickly, performed immediately faster than MultiTap and handled OOV words more efficiently than DBD. © 2010 ACM.
Gang Wang, Fei Wang, et al.
IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part B: Cybernetics
Atsuyoshi Nakamura, Naoki Abe
Electronic Commerce Research
Kun Wang, Juwei Shi, et al.
PACT 2011
Yingxin Pan, Danning Jiang, et al.
CHI 2010