TR Editors' blog

Putting Virtual Controls on Your Arm

"Skinput" lets users control a computer by tapping buttons projected onto their body.

Kristina Grifantini 03/02/2010

  • 1 Comment

Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and Microsoft have developed an acoustic biosensor that turns an arm into a crude touch screen.

An armband, worn around the bicep, detects minute sound waves that travel through skin when it is tapped. The researchers designed a software program that can distinguish the origin of the acoustic sounds--which vary due to slight differences in underlying bone density, mass and tissue. The system then translates these locations into button commands. A pico projector embedded in the armband projects a display--a game of Tetris or button controllers--onto a user's palm or arm.

The researchers found that they were able to achieve 95.5% accuracy with the controllers when five points on the arm were designated as buttons. They will present their results at this year's CHI conference next month.

See the researchers present Skinput below.

Print

Close Comments

To comment, please sign in or register

Forgot my password

nagendra.setty

1 Comment

  • 705 Days Ago
  • 03/10/2010

Looks similar to Sixth Sense technology...

Checked out the video, looks like a derivative of Pranav Mistry's Sixth sense technology.

Reply

About

Insights, opinions, and our editors' analysis of the latest in emerging technologies.

Subscribe to the TR Editors' blog RSS Feed

Advertisement
Advertisement

Facebook

Advertisement