Detail of Publication
Text Language | English |
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Authors | Shoya Ishimaru, Jens Weppner, Kai Kunze, Andreas Bulling, Koichi Kise, Andreas Dengel and Paul Lukowicz |
Title | In the Blink of an Eye — Combining Head Motion and Eye Blink Frequency for Activity Recognition with Google Glass. |
Journal | Proceedings of the 5th Augmented Human International Conference |
Pages | pp.150-153 |
Reviewed or not | Reviewed |
Month & Year | March 2014 |
Abstract | We demonstrate how information about eye blink frequency and head motion patterns derived from Google Glass sensors can be used to distinguish different types of high level activities. While it is well known that eye blink frequency is correlated with user activity, our aim is to show that (1) eye blink frequency data from an unobtrusive, commercial platform which is not a dedicated eye tracker is good enough to be useful and (2) that adding head motion patterns information significantly improves the recognition rates. The method is evaluated on a data set from an experiment containing five activity classes (reading, talking, watching TV, mathematical problem solving, and sawing) of eight participants showing 67% recognition accuracy for eye blinking only and 82% when extended with head motion patterns. |
- Entry for BibTeX
@InProceedings{Ishimaru2014, author = {Shoya Ishimaru and Jens Weppner and Kai Kunze and Andreas Bulling and Koichi Kise and Andreas Dengel and Paul Lukowicz}, title = {In the Blink of an Eye --- Combining Head Motion and Eye Blink Frequency for Activity Recognition with Google Glass.}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 5th Augmented Human International Conference}, year = 2014, month = mar, pages = {150--153} }