5 resultados para Interface multimídia
em CiencIPCA - Instituto Politécnico do Cávado e do Ave, Portugal
Resumo:
Laparoscopy is a surgical procedure on which operations in the abdomen are performed through small incisions using several specialized instruments. The laparoscopic surgery success greatly depends on surgeon skills and training. To achieve these technical high-standards, different apprenticeship methods have been developed, many based on in vivo training, an approach that involves high costs and complex setup procedures. This paper explores Virtual Reality (VR) simulation as an alternative for novice surgeons training. Even though several simulators are available on the market claiming successful training experiences, their use is extremely limited due to the economic costs involved. In this work, we present a low-cost laparoscopy simulator able to monitor and assist the trainee’s surgical movements. The developed prototype consists of a set of inexpensive sensors, namely an accelerometer, a gyroscope, a magnetometer and a flex sensor, attached to specific laparoscopic instruments. Our approach allows repeated assisted training of an exercise, without time constraints or additional costs, since no human artificial model is needed. A case study of our simulator applied to instrument manipulation practice (hand-eye coordination) is also presented.
Resumo:
Recent progresses in the software development world has assisted a change in hardware from heavy mainframes and desktop machines to unimaginable small devices leading to the prophetic "third computing paradigm", Ubiquitous Computing. Still, this novel unnoticeable devices lack in various capabilities, like computing power, storage capacity and human interface. Connectivity associated to this devices is also considered an handicap which comes generally associated expensive and limited protocols like GSM and UMTS. Considering this scenario as background, this paper presents a minimal communication protocol introducing better interfaces for limited devices. Special attention has been paid to the limitations of connectivity, storage capacity and scalability of the developed software applications. Illustrating this new protocol, a case-study is presented addressing car sensors communicating with a central
Resumo:
GUIsurfer: A Reverse Engineering Framework for User Interface Software
Resumo:
O objectivo da presente dissertação é a análise do desenvolvimento e utilização do acto de comunicar inserido num contexto da Cultura Digital. O processo de investigação procura a análise e compreensão da comunicação e das novas características conferidas à mensagem pelo factor multimédia. Reflecte-se sobre os modos como a prática comunicativa realizada com base no multimédia digital impulsiona uma nova forma de interacção comunicativa. A presente dissertação envolveu uma reflexão sobre a dinâmica relacional que se estabelece entre Comunicação, Design e Multimédia. Por um lado, procuram- -se definições estruturantes para a comunicação multimédia e a construção das suas mensagens, num processo mediado pela Semiótica e seu estudo de signos e ampliado pela Mediologia para um conceito de transmissão cultural. Por outro lado, apresenta- -se a Cultura Digital numa perspectiva histórica-evolutiva, contextualizando em termos tecnológicos e conceptuais o percurso que define a comunicação multimédia como a concebemos hoje. É, finalmente, analisado o novo espaço de comunicação digital, onde o design e arte multimédia se assumem como processo de investigação. O acto de comunicar entre indivíduos é um processo construído e adquirido. Além de tornar as mensagens em códigos úteis e compreensíveis, o multimédia é, fundamentalmente, comunicação, e as interacções resultantes deste processo reformulam o modelo de comunicação, tornando-o um campo de criação colectiva da mensagem.
Resumo:
In the context of an e ort to develop methodologies to support the evaluation of interactive system, this paper investigates an approach to detect graphical user interface bad smells. Our approach consists in detecting user interface bad smells through model-based reverse engineering from source code. Models are used to de ne which widgets are present in the interface, when can particular graphical user interface (GUI) events occur, under which conditions, which system actions are executed, and which GUI state is generated next.