Assessing the Acceptance of a Mid-Air Gesture Syntax for Smart Space Interaction: An Empirical Study
Ana M. Bernardos, Xian Wang, Luca Bergesio, Juan A. Besada, Jos\'e, R. Casar

TL;DR
This study evaluates a novel mid-air gesture syntax for smart space interaction, demonstrating its usability, social acceptance, and device preferences through empirical user testing.
Contribution
It introduces a language-inspired gesture syntax with a trainable recognition layer, tested across multiple devices in real-world settings.
Findings
Participants found the syntax easy to learn and effective.
Social context influences device preference for gesture recognition.
The phone was the most preferred device for its familiarity and efficiency.
Abstract
This article explores the use of a location-aware mid-air gesture-based command triplet syntax to interact with a smart space. The syntax, inspired by human language, is built as a vocative case with an imperative structure. In a sentence like 'Light, please switch on', the object being activated is invoked via making a gesture that mimics its initial letter/acronym (vocative, coincident with the sentence's elliptical subject). A geometrical or directional gesture then identifies the action (imperative verb) and may include an object feature or a second object with which to network (complement), which also represented by the initial or acronym letter. Technically, an interpreter relying on a trainable multidevice gesture recognition layer makes the pair/triplet syntax decoding possible. The recognition layer works on acceleration and position input signals from graspable (smartphone)…
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