This book describes an innovative approach to the interaction between
humans and a smart environment; an attempt to get a smart home to
understand intuitive, multi-modal, human-centred communication. State of
the art smart homes, like other "smart" technology, tend to demand that
the human user must adapt herself to the needs of the system. The hunt
for a truly user-centred, truly intuitive system has long proven to be
beyond the grasp of current technology.
When humans speak with one another, we are multimodal. Our speech is
supplemented with gestures, which serve as a parallel stream of
information, reinforcing the meaning of our words.
Drawing on well-established protocols in engineering and psychology, and
with no small amount of inspiration from a particular nonsense poem, we
have successfully concluded that hunt. This book describes the efforts,
undertaken over several years, to design, implement, and test a model of
interaction that allows untrained individuals to intuitively control a
complex series of networked and embedded systems. The theoretical
concepts are supported by a series of experimental studies, showing the
advantages of the novel approach, and pointing towards future work that
would facilitate the deployment of this concept in the real world.