Publication statistics
Pub. period:2009-2011
Pub. count:6
Number of co-authors:7
Co-authors
Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:
Jan Borchers:5James D. Hollan:3Malte Weiss:3 Productive colleagues
Yvonne Jansen's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:
James D. Hollan:49Jan Borchers:38Thorsten Karrer:13 
...that strange new zone between medium and message. That zone we call the interface
-- Steven Johnson, 1997
Featured chapter
Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann
Read Steve's chapter !
Latest books
The Social Design of Technical Systems: Building technologies for communities
by Brian Whitworth and Adnan Ahmad
Start reading
The Encyclopedia of Human-Computer Interaction, 2nd Ed.
by Mads Soegaard and Rikke Friis Dam
Start reading
Yvonne Jansen
Publications by Yvonne Jansen (bibliography)
Edit |
Del
Jansen, Yvonne, Karrer, Thorsten and Borchers, Jan (2011): MudPad: tactile feedback for touch surfaces. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2011 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2011. pp. 323-328.
MudPad is a system enriching touch surfaces with localized active haptic feedback. A soft and flexible overlay containing magnetorheological fluid is actuated by an array of electromagnets to create a variety of tactile sensations. As each magnet can be controlled individually, we are able to produce feedback in realtime locally at arbitrary points of interaction.
© All rights reserved Jansen et al. and/or their publisher
Edit |
Del
Jansen, Yvonne (2010): Mudpad: fluid haptics for multitouch surfaces. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2010 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2010. pp. 4351-4356.
In this paper, we present an active haptic multitouch input device. Its touch surface is a malleable pouch filled with a smart fluid. The viscosity of this fluid can be controlled to provide localized active haptic feedback. Magnetic fields can stiffen the liquid locally, thus creating an invisible "labyrinth that can be felt when a user tries to displace the liquid at an activated location. The user feels this labyrinth as a relief when running her fingers over the surface. We believe there are promising applications for this kind of haptic feedback. Hence, we intend to further investigate them in comparison to traditional vibrotactile feedback techniques.
© All rights reserved Jansen and/or his/her publisher
Edit |
Del
Jansen, Yvonne, Karrer, Thorsten and Borchers, Jan (2010): MudPad: localized tactile feedback on touch surfaces. In: Proceedings of the 2010 ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology 2010. pp. 385-386.
We present MudPad, a system that is capable of localized active haptic feedback on multitouch surfaces. An array of electromagnets locally actuates a tablet-sized overlay containing magnetorheological (MR) fluid. The reaction time of the fluid is fast enough for realtime feedback ranging from static levels of surface softness to a broad set of dynamically changeable textures. As each area can be addressed individually, the entire visual interface can be enriched with a multi-touch haptic layer that conveys semantic information as the appropriate counterpart to multi-touch input.
© All rights reserved Jansen et al. and/or their publisher
Edit |
Del
Weiss, Malte, Wagner, Julie, Jansen, Yvonne, Jennings, Roger, Khoshabeh, Ramsin, Hollan, James D. and Borchers, Jan (2009): SLAP widgets: bridging the gap between virtual and physical controls on tabletops. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2009 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2009. pp. 481-490.
We present Silicone iLluminated Active Peripherals (SLAP), a system of tangible, translucent widgets for use on multitouch tabletops. SLAP Widgets are cast from silicone or made of acrylic, and include sliders, knobs, keyboards, and buttons. They add tactile feedback to multi-touch tables, improving input accuracy. Using rear projection, SLAP Widgets can be relabeled dynamically, providing inexpensive, battery-free, and untethered augmentations. Furthermore, SLAP combines the flexibility of virtual objects with physical affordances. We evaluate how SLAP Widgets influence the user experience on tabletops compared to virtual controls. Empirical studies show that SLAPWidgets are easy to use and outperform virtual controls significantly in terms of accuracy and overall interaction time.
© All rights reserved Weiss et al. and/or ACM Press
Edit |
Del
Weiss, Malte, Jennings, Roger, Khoshabeh, Ramsin, Borchers, Jan, Wagner, Julie, Jansen, Yvonne and Hollan, James D. (2009): SLAP widgets: bridging the gap between virtual and physical controls on tabletops. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2009 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2009. pp. 3229-3234.
We present Silicone iLluminated Active Peripherals (SLAP), a system of tangible, transparent widgets for use on vision-based multi-touch tabletops. SLAP Widgets are cast from silicone or made of acrylic and include sliders, knobs, keyboards, and keypads. They add tactile feedback to multi-touch tables and can be dynamically relabeled with rear projection. They are inexpensive, battery-free, and untethered widgets combining the flexibility of virtual objects with tangible affordances of physical objects. Our demonstration shows how SLAP Widgets can augment input on multi-touch tabletops with modest infrastructure costs.
© All rights reserved Weiss et al. and/or ACM Press
Edit |
Del
Weiss, Malte, Wagner, Julie, Jennings, Roger, Jansen, Yvonne, Khoshabeh, Ramsin, Hollan, James D. and Borchers, Jan (2009): SLAPbook: tangible widgets on multi-touch tables in groupware environments. In: Villar, Nicolas, Izadi, Shahram, Fraser, Mike and Benford, Steve (eds.) TEI 2009 - Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Tangible and Embedded Interaction February 16-18, 2009, Cambridge, UK. pp. 297-300.
Show list on your website
Join the technology elite and advance:
Changes to this page (author)
05 Jul 2011: Modified03 Nov 2010: Modified02 Nov 2010: Modified
01 Jun 2009: Modified
09 May 2009: Added
09 May 2009: Modified
Page Information
Page maintainer:
The Editorial Team
URL: http://www.interaction-design.org/references/authors/yvonne_jansen.html