Kurt Edward Partridge
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kurt Edward Partridge.
human factors in computing systems | 2013
Ying Yin; Tom Ouyang; Kurt Edward Partridge; Shumin Zhai
We propose a new approach for improving text entry accuracy on touchscreen keyboards by adapting the underlying spatial model to factors such as input hand postures, individuals, and target key positions. To combine these factors together, we introduce a hierarchical spatial backoff model (SBM) that consists of submodels with different levels of complexity. The most general model includes no adaptive factors, whereas the most specific model includes all three. Considering that in practice people may switch hand postures (e.g., from two-thumb to one-finger) to better suit a situation, and that the specific submodels may take time to train for each user, a specific submodel should be applied only if its corresponding input posture can be identified with confidence, and if the submodel has enough training data from the user. We introduce the backoff mechanism to fall back to a simpler model if either of these conditions are not met. We implemented a prototype system capable of reducing the language-model-independent error rate by 13.2% using an online posture classifier with 86.4% accuracy. Further improvements in error rate may be possible with even better posture classification.
user interface software and technology | 2012
Xiaojun Bi; Ciprian Chelba; Tom Ouyang; Kurt Edward Partridge; Shumin Zhai
Gesture keyboards represent an increasingly popular way to input text on mobile devices today. However, current gesture keyboards are exclusively unimanual. To take advantage of the capability of modern multi-touch screens, we created a novel bimanual gesture text entry system, extending the gesture keyboard paradigm from one finger to multiple fingers. To address the complexity of recognizing bimanual gesture, we designed and implemented two related interaction methods, finger-release and space-required, both based on a new multi-stroke gesture recognition algorithm. A formal experiment showed that bimanual gesture behaviors were easy to learn. They improved comfort and reduced the physical demand relative to unimanual gestures on tablets. The results indicated that these new gesture keyboards were valuable complements to unimanual gesture and regular typing keyboards.
human factors in computing systems | 2015
Andrew Fowler; Kurt Edward Partridge; Ciprian Chelba; Xiaojun Bi; Tom Ouyang; Shumin Zhai
Modern smartphones correct typing errors and learn user-specific words (such as proper names). Both techniques are useful, yet little has been published about their technical specifics and concrete benefits. One reason is that typing accuracy is difficult to measure empirically on a large scale. We describe a closed-loop, smart touch keyboard (STK) evaluation system that we have implemented to solve this problem. It includes a principled typing simulator for generating human-like noisy touch input, a simple-yet-effective decoder for reconstructing typed words from such spatial data, a large web-scale background language model (LM), and a method for incorporating LM personalization. Using the Enron email corpus as a personalization test set, we show for the first time at this scale that a combined spatial-language model reduces word error rate from a pre-model baseline of 38.4% down to 5.7%, and that LM personalization can improve this further to 4.6%.
Archive | 2013
Shumin Zhai; Kurt Edward Partridge; Xiaojun Bi; Yu Ouyang
human factors in computing systems | 2013
Xiaojun Bi; Shiri Azenkot; Kurt Edward Partridge; Shumin Zhai
Archive | 2013
Shumin Zhai; Kurt Edward Partridge; Yu Ouyang
Archive | 2013
Xiaojun Bi; Shiri Azenkot; Kurt Edward Partridge; Shumin Zhai
Archive | 2013
Xiaojun Bi; Kurt Edward Partridge; Yu Ouyang; Shumin Zhai
Archive | 2013
Shumin Zhai; Kurt Edward Partridge; Xiaojun Bi; Yu Ouyang
Archive | 2013
Shumin Zhai; Kurt Edward Partridge; Xiaojun Bi; Yu Ouyang