Designing a Handwriting Recognition Based Writing Environment J C Read, S J MacFarlane, C Casey...
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Transcript of Designing a Handwriting Recognition Based Writing Environment J C Read, S J MacFarlane, C Casey...
Designing a Handwriting Recognition Based Writing Environment
J C Read, S J MacFarlane, C CaseyDepartment of Computing, University of
Central Lancashire, Preston, UK
IntroductionBackground InformationDescription of the Observational StudyFindings from the study
General FindingsFindings relating to the Handwriting RecognitionSatisfaction measuring
Informing the designDescription of the PrototypeConclusions
Who? Why? What? Where? How?Janet C Read, lecturer and mother!Elodie, PhD studySpeech, handwriting: - Human Language Technology, Free text not command.Lancs..UK; white rural primary – age 7 – 9Research, Observations, Usability studies
Previous WorkQWERTY keyboard difficult (WES2000)HLT attractive to children, HR feasible (HCI2000, HCI2001)Measuring Fun (CandF2000, CandF2001)Participatory design (IDC2002)Errors in HR interfaces (NordiCHI2002)
The Observational StudyChildren aged 7 and 8Normal classroom activitiesIn twosLaptop (HR), Desktop (QWERTY), Desk (Pencil)Different writing tasksDifficulties, Errors, Corrections
Pen and Paper ErrorsErrors made – missing words, spelling, letters written backwardsError prevention – asked, avoided, lookedError discovery – reading back, self, teacher or another childError repair – rub out, scribble out, cross out, overwrite, re-write, squeeze in , change
QWERTY - ErrorsErrors made – missing words, spelling, hit wrong keyError prevention – asked, avoided, lookedError discovery – reading back, self, teacher or another child, wiggly lines!Error repair – position and rub out, rub back to, rub all, retype, change
Handwriting Recognition - OverviewHardware – Graphics tablet and penSoftware – Recognition software
Fuzzy computingDisobedient – ambiguousCharacter or word basedOn line – ‘t’ stroke problems
Demonstration
Demonstration of handwriting
Handwriting Recognition – Errors (1)Child
Errors made – miss words, spellings, letters backwards, pen up
ComputerErrors made – Bad recognition, hardware
ChildError prevention – ask, avoid, look
ComputerError prevention – spell checker (not used)
Handwriting Recognition – Errors (2)Child
Error discovery Before Recognition – reading back, teacher, other child After Recognition – as above + wiggly lines!
Error repair Before recognition – scribble out, overwrite, insert letter After Recognition – rub back to, rub all, rewrite all or
some, use QWERTY
Satisfaction MeasuringErrors do not imply dissatisfactionWHY?
Sticky – addictive vs. nothing betterFunny – humour with recognition – easy to use
Designing a Prototype - methodUsers
Children, environment, characteristics, mental models
TasksGoal oriented – hierarchy
SystemStates – dangerous states
Interface UI design guidelines
ChildClassroom based – standard equipment, needs to be easy to use, robust, minimal help neededChildren – varied pen control, different levels of expertise with technology, different reading skills, poor or very good letter formationMental model – see tablet as paper – want to scribble out and insert missed words
Child writing
User GoalTo produce good written work
PlanningTranslationReviewing and Editing
(Hayes and Flower)
Supporting the writer (1)Ideas – pop up in clouds, can have many, child can re-order them and can put them away, use handwriting that is not recognisedTranslation – training supported, lines can be drawn on screen or on the tablet (or both!); recognition can be immediate or delayed;
Supporting the writer (2)Reviewing – computer can read back recognised text, child can read recognised or script text; spellings may be highlighted in recognised text – teacher controlsEditing – child can edit with rubber and pen on script, or with keyboard on recognised text
System StatesEntry stateRecognition stateEdit state
DANGEROUS STATES Pens that point Cursors that confound Spaces that stop
Interface Design (1)Full writing screenAbility to place new pagesMenus at the bottomHaptic boundary preferredTablet matched to screenPen can be turned on and off
Interface design (2)Video clip facilityTeachers screenAssistantCustomisableTraining activities
And so……………The designs for a product for a small group of users, for a narrow applicationKeyboard interfaceError repairSpeech recognition
Thank youJanet C Read
University of Central LancashirePreston
Up North!England