- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Computer / General
Full Description
Radars, historically used in fields such as surveillance, aviation, and ground imaging, can provide new application opportunities in interactive computer systems. Their specific signal representations obscure human identity, making them well-suited for integration into privacy-oriented applications in our everyday lives.
This book explores how radar enables robust, non-contact sensing for the detection of human presence, implementation of gesture-based interaction, and recognition of user intent without the need of physical contact. With scientific and technical contributions from experts in radar engineering, signal processing, human-computer interaction, computational modelling, and machine learning, the book presents signal processing techniques and tools, surveys publicly available datasets, and highlights novel applications integrating radar sensing.
Radar-Based Human-Computer Interaction grounds this emerging interdisciplinary field, addressing researchers and practitioners interested in building the next generation of robust, adaptive, and privacy-preserving user interfaces through radar integration.
Contents
Part 1: Background.- Introduction to radars.- Part 2: Digital signal processing.- Digital signal processing tools for radar-based human-computer interaction.- Comparative testing of radar signal representations when sensing through materials.- Part 3: Radar integration into everyday environments.- Radar-based human-computer interaction when sensing through materials.- Novel gestural interactions in smart buildings by radar-based sensing.- Part 4: Applications of radar-based HCI.- Radar-based gesture recognition on deformable objects.- Fine-grained context awareness with radar-based and vision-based surface sensing.- A hand air-writing system using MIMO radar and deep learning.- Part 5: Datasets.- A survey of datasets for radar-based human-computer interaction.- Synthetic data generation for radar-based human-computer interaction.- Part 6: Outlook.- Current state and future research directions of radar-based human-computer interaction.