Home Executive Summary Thesis Video Showreel Contact

Those Who Want to See Must Close Their Eyes

Bibliography

  1. Apple Inc., http://www.apple.com/
  2. Green J, My 4-Week Quest: Be Smarter, Wired, 15.01 (2007)
  3. McCloud S, Understanding Comics (2003)
  4. Meronk F, Atlas of Eyelid and Facial Anatomy, http://www.drmeronk.com/blephnews/anatomy.html
  5. Evinger C Manning KA Sibony PA, Eyelid Movements - Mechanisms and Normal Data, Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science, 32, 387-400 (1991)
  6. VanderWerf F Brassinga P Reits D Aramideh M Ongerboer de Visser B, Eyelid Movements: Behavioral Studies of Blinking in Humans Under Different Stimulus Conditions, J Neurophysiol, 89, 2784-2796 (2003)
  7. Guitton D Simard R Coderef F, Upper Eyelid Movements Measured With a Search Coil During Blinks and Vertical Saccades, Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science, 32 (13), 3298-3305 (1991)
  8. Sun et al., Age-Related Changes in Human Blinks, Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science, 38 (1), 92-100 (1997)
  9. Flaten MA Powell PA, Conditioned-Reflex Facilitation in Young and Older Adults, Experimental Aging Research, 24 (4), 387-410 (1999)
  10. Sears LL Finn PR Steinmetz JE, Abnormal classical eye-blink ing in autism, Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 24 (6), 737-751 (1994)
  11. Bour LJ Aramideh M Ongerboer de Visser BW, Neurophysiological Aspects of Eye and Eyelid Movements During Blinking in Humans, J Neurophysiol, 83 (1), 166-176 (2000)
  12. Oxford Advanced Learner`s Dictionary, (to) squint, http://www.oup.com/elt/oald/
  13. Ergonomic Problems of Eye Strain, http://www.safecomputingtips.com/ergonomic-problems-eye.html
  14. Dealing With Eyestrain, http://www.upmc.com/HealthManagement/ManagingYourHealth/Pers...
  15. Mapp AP Ono H Barbeito R, What does the dominant eye dominate? A brief and somewhat contentious review, Perception and Psychophysics, 65 (2), 310-317 (2003)
  16. Amblyopia (lazy eye), http://www.lazyeye.org/
  17. Craig A McIsaac P Tran Y Kirkup L Searle A, Alpha wave reactivity following eye closure: a potential method of remote hands free control for the disabled, Technology and Disability, 10, 187-194 (1999)
  18. Davis et al., Human Brain Potentials During the Onset of Sleep, Journal of Neurophysiology, 1, 24-38 (1938)
  19. Stages of Sleep, http://web.umr.edu/~psyworld/sleep_stages.htm
  20. Hurowitz CS Dunn S Domhoff GW Fiss H, The Dreams of Blind Men and Women: A Replication and Extension of Previous Findings, Dreaming, 9, 183-193 (1999)
  21. Sadato et al., Activation of the primary visual cortex by Braille reading in blind subjects, Nature, 380, 526-528 (1996)
  22. Seppa N, Do blind people track sounds better?, Science News, 154 (12), 180 (1998)
  23. Gougoux et al., Pitch discrimination in the early blind, Nature, 430, 309 (2004)
  24. Bristow D Haynes JD Sylvester R Frith C Rees G, Blinking Suppresses the Neural Response to Unchanging Retinal Stimulation, Current Biology, 15, 1296-1300 (2005)
  25. Grimes J, On the failure to detect changes in scenes across saccades, In K. Akins (Ed.) Vancouver Studies in Cognitive Science, 5, 89-110 (1996)
  26. O`Regan JK Deubel H Clark JJ Rensink RA, Picture Changes During Blinks: Looking Without Seeing and Seeing Without Looking, Visual Cognition, 7 (1/2/3), 191-211 (2000)
  27. Gilad Y Wiebe V Przeworski M Lancet D Paabo S, Loss of Olfactory Receptor Genes Coincides with the Acquisition of Full Trichromatic Vision in Primates, PLoS Biol, 2, 120-126 (2004)
  28. McGurk H MacDonald J, Hearing lips and seeing voices, Nature, 264, 746-748 (1976)
  29. Maaso A, McGurk effect video, http://www.media.uio.no/personer/arntm/McGurk_english.html
  30. Kosslyn S, Measuring the visual angle of the mind's eye, Cognitive Psychology, 10, 356-389 (1978)
  31. D`Esposito M Detre JA Aguirre GK Stallcup M Alsop DC Tippet LJ Farah MJ, A Functional MRI Study Of Mental Image Generation, Neuropsychologia, 35, 725-730 (1997)
  32. Rodionovi V Zislin J Elidan J, Imagination of Body Rotation can Induce Eye Movements, Acta Otolaryngol, 124, 684-689 (2004)
  33. Gottlieb S, Alfred Hitchcock: Interviews (2003)
  34. Shema Israel: Jewish Prayer and Ritual, http://www.jewishmag.com/49mag/shema/shema.htm
  35. Buddhism in a Nutshell: Anapana Sati, http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/narada/nutshell.html
  36. Ways of Christ: Christian Meditation, http://www.ways-of-christ.net/topics/meditation.htm
  37. Stress Relief: Yoga Meditation and Other Relaxation Techniques, http://www.helpguide.org/mental/stress_relief_meditation_yoga_relaxation.htm
  38. Orme-Johnson DW, Autonomic Stability and Transcendental Meditation, Psychosomatic Medicine, 35 (4), 341-350 (1973)
  39. Ip Man's Family Style of Wing Chun, http://www.chongskungfu.com/xumedia/sensitivity.html
  40. Tai Chi as a Martial Art, http://www.tai-chi.de/english/home/articles/taichi_asamartialart.html
  41. Grauman K Betke M Lombardi J Gips J Bradski GR, Communication via eye blinks and eyebrowraises: video-based human-computer interfaces, Univ Access Inf Soc, 2, 359-373 (2003)
  42. Poggi I Pelachaud C De Rosis F, Eye communication in a conversational 3D synthetic agent, AI Communications, 13, 169-181 (2000)
  43. Kaplan G Rogers LJ, Eyes and Communication in Orang-utans, Advances in EthologyAdvances in Ethology (1999)
  44. Than K, Why Eyes are So Alluring, http://www.livescience.com/humanbiology/061107_human_eyes.html
  45. Tomasello M Hare B Lehmann H Cal J, Reliance on head versus eyes in the gaze following of great apes and human infants: the cooperative eye hypothesis, Journal of Human Evolution, 1-7 (2006)
  46. Wren K, Looking for fear? It's in your eyes!, http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6719954/
  47. Whalen PJ Shin LM McInerney SC Fischer H Wright CI Rauch SL, A functional MRI study of human amygdala responses to facial expressions of fear versus anger., Emotion, 1 (1), 70-83 (2003)
  48. Dickie C Vertegaal R Sohn C Cheng D, eyeLook: Using Attention to Facilitate Mobile Media Consumption, Proceedings of the UIST (2005)
  49. Vertegaal R, Designing Attentive interfaces, ETRA `02: Proceedings of the 2002 symposium on Eye tracking research and applications, 23-30 (2002)
  50. Zhai S, What's in the Eyes for Attentive Interfaces, Communications of the ACM, 46, 34-39 (2003)
  51. Selker T, Visual Attentive Interfaces, BT Technology Journal, 22 (4), 146-150 (2004)
  52. Bonanni L Lee CH Selker T, Attention-based design of augmented reality interfaces, CHI `05: Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems, -1231 (2005)
  53. Shell et al., ECSGglasses And EyePliances: Using Attention To Open Sociable Windows Of Interaction, ETRA `04: Proceedings of the 2004 symposium on Eye tracking research and applications, 93-100 (2004)
  54. Tobii Technology AB, http://www.tobii.com/
  55. SR Research Ltd., http://www.sr-research.com
  56. Morimoto CH Koons D Amir A Flickner M, Pupil detection and tracking using multiple light sources, Image and Vision Computing, 18, 331-335 (2000)
  57. Prendinger H Ma C Yingzi J Nakasone A Ishizuka M, Understanding the effect of life-like interface agents through users' eye movements, ICMI `05: Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Multimodal interfaces, 108-115 (2005)
  58. Bates et al., Zooming Interfaces! Enhancing the Performance of Eye Controlled Pointing Devices, Proceedings of the fifth international ACM conference on Assistive technologies, 119-126 (2002)
  59. Setlur V Gooch B, Is that a smile?: gaze dependent facial expressions, NPAR `04: Proceedings of the 3rd international symposium on Non-photorealistic animation and rendering, 79-151 (2004)
  60. Kapoor A Picard RW, A Real-Time Head Nod and Shake Detector, PUI (2001)
  61. Surakka V Illi M Isokoski P, Gazing and Frowning as a New Human-Computer Interaction Technique, ACM Transactions on Applied Perceptions, 1 (1), 40-56 (2004)
  62. Fernandez R Scheirer J Picard RW, Expression glasses a wearable device for facial expression recognition (1999)
  63. Multimodal Web Applications with XHTML+Voice (X+V) (200), http://www-306.ibm.com/software/pervasive/multimodal/
  64. Opera, Multimodal Browser, http://www.opera.com/products/devices/multimodal/
  65. Brewster et al., Multimodal 'eyes-free' interaction techniques for wearable devices, CHI `03: Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, 473-480 (2003)
  66. Brewster SA Wright PC Edwards ADN, Parallel Earcons: Reducing the Length of Audio Messages, International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, 43 (2), 153-175 (1995)
  67. Brewster SA Wright PC Edwards ADN, The Design and Evaluation of an Auditory-Enhanced ScrollBar, Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems: celebrating interdependence (1994)
  68. Holland S Morse DR Gedenryd H, AudioGPS: Spatial Audio Navigation with a Minimal Attention Interface, Personal Ubiquitous Computing, 6, 253-259 (2002)
  69. Friedlander N Schlueter K Mantei M, Bullseye! When Fitts' law doesn't fit, Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, 257-264 (1998)
  70. Crevits L Simons B Wildenbeest J, Effect of Sleep Deprivation on Saccades and Eyelid Blinking, Eur Neurol, 50, 176-180 (2003)
  71. Caffier PP Erdmann U Ullsperger P, Experimental evaluation of eye-blink parameters as a drowsiness measure, Eur J Appl Physiol, 89, 319-325 (2003)
  72. U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration, Eye-activity measures of fatigue and napping as a fatigue countermeasure Report FHWA-MC-99-028) Federal Highway Administration Washington DC (1999)
  73. Caffier PP Ullsperger U Erdmann U, Relationship between personal state ratings and eyeblink parameters recorded with contact-free infrared sensor, Psychophysiology, 36, 20 (1999)
  74. Morris T Miller JC, Electrooculographic and performance indices of fatigue during simulated Flight, Biol Psychol, 42, 343-360 (1996)
  75. Wilson GF Lambert J, Physiological effects of varied mental workload in pilots during Flight, Psychophysiology, 36, 126 (1999)
  76. Haider E Rohmert W, Untersuchung zur Lidschlussfrequenz bei vierstundiger simulierter Kraftfahrzeugfahrt, Eur J Appl Psycho, 39, 137-148 (1976)
  77. Sugiyama K Nakano T Yamamoto S Ishihara T Fujii H Akutsu E, Method of detecting drowsiness level by utilizing blinking duration, JSAE, Rev 17 (2), 159-163 (1996)
  78. Mourant RR Lakshmanan R Chantadisai R, Visual fatigue and CRT display terminals, Hum Fact, 23, 529-540 (1981)
  79. Carpenter A, The rate of blinking during prolonged visual search, J Exp Psychol, 38, 587-591 (1948)
  80. Philips Wake-up Light, http://www.p4c.philips.com/files/h/hf3461_01/hf3461_01_pss_aen.pdf
  81. Atkinson MT Gucukoglu S Machin CHC Lawrence AE, Making the Mainstream Accessible: Redefining the Game, Sandbox SymposiumSandbox Symposium (2006)
  82. Velleman E Van Tol R Huiberts S Verwey H, 3D Shooting Games Multimodal Games Sound Games and More Working Examples of the Future of Games for the Blind, ICCHP (2004)
  83. Audiogames (2006), http://www.audiogames.net
  84. Nintendo Corporation Ltd., Soundvoyager, http://www.nintendo.co.jp/n08/bit_g/soundvoyager/index.html
  85. Archambault D Olivier D, How to Make Games for Visually Impaired Children, Proceedings of the ACE (2005)
  86. Schneider A, Experimental Device for Performance - Wearables Project.03, http://itp.nyu.edu/~ajs510/blog/archives/2007/02/experimental_de_2.html
  87. Nintendo Corporation Ltd., Wii, http://www.wii.com
  88. Sony Computer Entertainment, EyeToy, http://www.playstation.com
  89. ID Software, Quake III Arena, http://www.idsoftware.com
  90. VNC, http://www.realvnc.com
  91. Adobe Systems Incorporated, Photoshop CS2, http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop/family.html
  92. NaturalSoft Ltd., Natural Reader, http://www.naturalreaders.com/
  93. Microsoft Corporation, Microsoft Office Word, http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/word/default.aspx
  94. Mindfield Biosystems Ltd., http://www.mindfield-biosystems.com/
  95. Ambisonics Binaural, http://iem.at/Members/noisternig/bin_ambi/view
  96. Imagine Television, 24