Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




INTERNET SPACE
System allows multitasking runners to read on a treadmill
by Emil Venere for Purdue News
West Lafayette IN (SPX) Apr 18, 2013


Purdue industrial engineering doctoral candidate Bum chul Kwon demonstrates a new system that allows treadmill users to read while they run. The system, called ReadingMate, adjusts text on a monitor to counteract the bobbing motion of a runner's head so that the text appears still. (Purdue University photo/Mark Simons)

A new innovation allows treadmill users to work their bodies and brains at the same time. The system, called ReadingMate, adjusts text on a monitor to counteract the bobbing motion of a runner's head so that the text appears still, said Ji Soo Yi, an assistant professor of industrial engineering at Purdue University.

"Not many people can run and read at the same time," said Yi, working with doctoral candidate Bum chul Kwon. "This is because the relative location of the eyes to the text is vigorously changing, and our eyes try to constantly adjust to such changes, which is burdensome."

The small font size in text adds to the difficulty.

"You could increase the font size and have a large-screen monitor on the wall, but that's impractical because you cannot have numerous big screen displays in an exercise room," Yi said.

The researchers developed ReadingMate on the hypothesis that the primary impediment to reading while running is the head's vertical movement. The new system allows a treadmill user to read normal-size text on a small monitor mounted in front of the machine.

Findings appear online this month in Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. The paper was authored by Kwon, Yi and Yu Zhu, an associate professor of statistics.

The study included 15 students, who carried out a "letter-counting" task while running on a treadmill and using ReadingMate. The test requires participants to count how many times the letter F occurs in two lines of text situated among 10 lines displayed on a computer monitor.

The user wears goggles equipped with infrared LEDs, and an infrared camera captures the LEDs, tracking the runner's bobbing head. Then the text is moved in unison with the head movement, taking into consideration the human reflex to compensate for motion.

"Our eyes can accommodate vibration to a certain degree," said Yi, director of Purdue's Healthcare and Information Visualization Engineering Lab, or HIVE. "There are compensatory reflex mechanisms that tend to stabilize the head and eyes to maintain gaze and head position."

Kwon led work to create an algorithm to correctly move the text, accounting for this reflex.

"You can't just move the text exactly in synch with the head because the eye is already doing what it can to compensate," he said. "So you have to account for that compensation by moving the text slightly out of synch with the head motion."

The research showed a higher accuracy for people who used ReadingMate compared to those in a control group.

"We also measured whether participants gave up on counting the letters because the task was too difficult," Kwon said. "We often saw people giving up without ReadingMate, especially with certain font sizes and smaller spaces between lines."

The system also might be used by heavy equipment operators and aircraft pilots.

"Both may experience heavy shaking and turbulence while reading information from a display," he said. "ReadingMate could stabilize the content in such cases."

Zygmunt Pizlo, a professor in the Department of Psychological Sciences, provided critical advice during preliminary investigations, and industrial engineering student Yuming Zhang assisted post-experiment data analysis. Doctoral Student Han Wu in the Department of Statistics also was involved in the research.

.


Related Links
Purdue University.
Satellite-based Internet technologies






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








INTERNET SPACE
Researchers say new keyboard for touchscreens lets thumbs fly fast
Saarbrucken, Germany (UPI) Apr 17, 2013
People who think they're "all thumbs" may soon get help from a keyboard meant to enable faster thumb-typing on touchscreen devices, German researchers say. A team at the Max Planck Institute for Informatics reported computational optimization techniques in conjunction with a model of thumb movement were applied to millions of potential keyboard layouts to identify one that yields superi ... read more


INTERNET SPACE
Sweden proposes extending tax breaks for biofuels, green cars

NREL Survey Shows Dramatic Improvement in B100 Biodiesel Quality

Surprising findings on hydrogen production in green algae

Enzymes from horse feces could hold secrets to streamlining biofuel production

INTERNET SPACE
Swarming robots could be the servants of the future

Robot ants successfully mimic real colony behavior

Small swarm of robots could do tasks

Robots joining China businesses, factories

INTERNET SPACE
U.S. leads in wind installations

Providing Capital and Technology, GE is Farming the Wind in America's Heartland with Enel Green Power

Wind skeptic British minister replaced

Using fluctuating wind power

INTERNET SPACE
Locata Positioning will Underpin Future Crash Avoidance Research

World car firms see China market as saviour

Toyota hybrid sales over 1.2 mn in a year: firm

Compact multipurpose scooter for crowded megacities

INTERNET SPACE
Development of clean energy has 'stalled,' international agency says

Canada: Chinese energy investment welcome

Arguments spill in battle over Canada-US pipeline

India to boost clean energy

INTERNET SPACE
Bulgarian nuclear plant shuts down reactor

Iranian leader steers clear of talking uranium in Niger

GCC states demand IAEA inspections on Iran nuclear plant

EU to probe Bulgaria energy sector

INTERNET SPACE
Renewable Energy Won't Stop Climate Change

Is Tunisia the New Hot Spot for Energy Investors?

Jordan scrambles to secure energy resources

ADB report warns on Asian energy

INTERNET SPACE
Brazil urged to stop invading indigenous lands

New research challenges assumptions about effects of global warming on mountain tree line

Brazil's indigenous protest to defend ancestral lands

Activist silenced as China island forests destroyed




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement