Synchronous Gestures in Multi-Display Environments Gonzalo Ramos University of Toronto, Live Labs Kenneth Hinckley Microsoft Research Andy Wilson Microsoft Research Raman Sarin Microsoft Research RUNNING HEAD: SYNCH. GESTURES IN DISPLAY ENVIRONMENTS Corresponding Author’s Contact Information: Gonzalo Ramos 136 – 102nd Ave SE, #226 Bellevue, WA, 98004, USA (425)445-3724
[email protected] - 1 - Brief Authors’ Biographies: Gonzalo Ramos received his Honors Bachelors in Computer Science from the University of Buenos Aires where he worked on image compression and wavelets. He later obtained his M.Sc. in Computer Science at the University of Toronto, focusing on numerical analysis and scientific visualization issues. He completed his doctoral studies in Computer Science at the University of Toronto doing research in Human-Computer Interaction. Currently he is a scientist at Microsoft’s Live Labs. Kenneth Hinckley is a research scientist at Microsoft Research. Ken’s research extends the expressiveness and richness of user interfaces by designing novel input technologies and techniques. He attacks his research from a systems perspective, by designing and prototyping advanced functionality, as well as via user studies of novel human-computer interactions and quantitative analysis of user performance in experimental tasks. He holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Virginia, where he studied with Randy Pausch. This article is dedicated to Randy’s heroic battle against pancreatic cancer. Andy Wilson is a member of the Adaptive Systems and Interaction group at Microsoft Research. His current areas of interest include applying sensing techniques to enable new styles of human-computer interaction, as well as machine learning, gesture-based interfaces, inertial sensing and display technologies.