Tatsuhito Awaji’s research while affiliated with University of Electro-Communications and other places

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Publications (2)


A Wind Communication Interface : BYU-BYU-View
  • Article

February 2017

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1 Citation

Erika Sawada

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Tatsuhito Awaji

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Keisuke Morishita

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[...]

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This system is an interface realized with the symbiosis of the input/output of wind and graphics. This system brings the new communication medium of "wind" into the bidirectional interaction between the virtual environment and the real environment by integrating the graphic presentation with the input and output of wind on a special screen. The user can interact with the virtual environment in the screen through his/her breath and wind emission. Conversely, actions from the virtual environment to the user are performed by wind changing dynamically. As a result, the user can share not only sights and sounds but also the cutaneous sensation by wind with the system, and interact with the virtual environment feeling a non-conventional deep relationship.


BYU-BYU-View: a wind communication interface

August 2007

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42 Reads

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32 Citations

BYU-BYU-View is a novel interface realized with the symbiosis of the input/output of wind and the computer graphics. "BYU-BYU" is a japanese onomatopoeia for a howling wind. It adds a new element, that is, "wind", to the direct interaction with a user and a virtual environment, and the communication through a network, by integrating the graphic presentation with the input and output of wind on a special screen.

Citations (1)


... Action-based mappings have also been used in exergames and therapeutic games, where a game element moves in accordance with the user's breathing upwards and downwards to navigate through a world [5,52,67,68,73]. Sawada et al. [61] presented a stationary setting that could transfer breathing actions between two users using an array of ventilators and breathing sensors arranged in front of users. While these works focus on breathing as input modality, Hashimoto et al. [24] developed a straw-like breathing interface that allows an application to adapt inhalation resistance in order to simulate drinking through a straw. ...

Reference:

AirRes Mask: A Precise and Robust Virtual Reality Breathing Interface Utilizing Breathing Resistance as Output Modality
BYU-BYU-View: a wind communication interface
  • Citing Article
  • August 2007