Researchers
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) are developing a new
wearable device that turns the user’s thumbnail into a miniature
wireless track pad.
They
envision that the technology could let users control wireless devices
when their hands are full – answering the phone call while cooking, for
instance.
“It’s
very unobtrusive. When I put this on, it becomes part of my body. I
have the power to take it off, so it still gives you control over it.
But it allows this very close connection to your body,” said lead author
Cindy Hsin-Liu Kao, a graduate student at the MIT.
The
device could enable subtle communication in circumstances that require
it, such as sending a quick text to a child while attending an important
meeting.
According to Kao, the device was inspired by the colourful stickers that some women apply to their nails.
The
researchers envision that a commercial version of their device would
have a detachable membrane on its surface, so that users could
coordinate surface patterns with their clothes.
And it’s easily accessed by the other fingers – even when the user is holding something in his or her hand.
For their initial prototype, the researchers built their sensors by printing copper electrodes on sheets of flexible polyester.
The
researchers said requiring surface contact with the operator’s finger
for just two or three seconds was enough to guard against inadvertent
activation and deactivation.
A
paper describing a prototype of the device is scheduled to be presented
at the Computer-Human Interaction conference in Seoul, South Korea this
week.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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