Browsing by Author "Ferreira, A."
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Item A Study on Natural 3D Shape Manipulation in VR(The Eurographics Association, 2018) Cordeiro, E.; Giannini, F.; Monti, M.; Mendes, D.; Ferreira, A.; Livesu, Marco and Pintore, Gianni and Signoroni, AlbertoCurrent immersive modeling environments use non-natural tools and interfaces to support traditional shape manipulation operations. In the future, we expect the availability of natural methods of interaction with 3D models in immersive environments to become increasingly important in several industrial applications. In this paper, we present a study conducted on a group of potential users with the aim of verifying if there is a common strategy in gestural and vocal interaction in immersive environments when the objective is modifying a 3D shape model. The results indicate that users adopt different strategies to perform the different tasks but in the execution of a specific activity it is possible to identify a set of similar and recurrent gestures. In general, the gestures made are physically plausible. During the experiment, the vocal interaction was used quite rarely and never to express a command to the system but rather to better specify what the user was doing with gestures.Item A Survey on 3D Virtual Object Manipulation: From the Desktop to Immersive Virtual Environments(© 2019 The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2019) Mendes, D.; Caputo, F. M.; Giachetti, A.; Ferreira, A.; Jorge, J.; Chen, Min and Benes, BedrichInteractions within virtual environments often require manipulating 3D virtual objects. To this end, researchers have endeavoured to find efficient solutions using either traditional input devices or focusing on different input modalities, such as touch and mid‐air gestures. Different virtual environments and diverse input modalities present specific issues to control object position, orientation and scaling: traditional mouse input, for example, presents non‐trivial challenges because of the need to map between 2D input and 3D actions. While interactive surfaces enable more natural approaches, they still require smart mappings. Mid‐air gestures can be exploited to offer natural manipulations mimicking interactions with physical objects. However, these approaches often lack precision and control. All these issues and many others have been addressed in a large body of work. In this article, we survey the state‐of‐the‐art in 3D object manipulation, ranging from traditional desktop approaches to touch and mid‐air interfaces, to interact in diverse virtual environments. We propose a new taxonomy to better classify manipulation properties. Using our taxonomy, we discuss the techniques presented in the surveyed literature, highlighting trends, guidelines and open challenges, that can be useful both to future research and to developers of 3D user interfaces.