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Albrecht Schmidt

Researcher at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich

Publications -  623
Citations -  20888

Albrecht Schmidt is an academic researcher from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ubiquitous computing & User interface. The author has an hindex of 66, co-authored 590 publications receiving 18728 citations. Previous affiliations of Albrecht Schmidt include Technische Universität Darmstadt & Karlsruhe Institute of Technology.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Challenges in Designing Interfaces for Large Displays: the Practitioners’ Point of View

TL;DR: Through analyzing the interviews, this work identifies a set of challenges that designers see as important for improving the user experience of large-screen systems and contrasts these challenges with findings from Human-Computer Interaction literature to highlight practice-motivated research challenges.
Book ChapterDOI

An Agent-Based Telecooperation Framework

TL;DR: A telecollaboration environment based on agent technology is proposed, which could be used as an information infrastructure for cooperative buildings or virtual enterprises.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimentelle und spielerische Lehr- und Lernsysteme (Playful Computing for Kids)

TL;DR: This work investigates how embedding novel tangible user interfaces (TUIs) intensify fun aspects and thus can enhance the learning experience and shows three experimental appliances based on novel tangibleuser interfaces which are ideal to drive learning applications.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Supporting children with special needs through multi-perspective behavior analysis

TL;DR: MuPerBeAn, a platform that allows multi-perspective video footage from mobile cameras to be collected, synchronously reviewed, and annotated, and shows that observing multiple mobile perspectives can help children as well as teachers to better reflect on situations, particularly during education.

Interaction Spaces: Interactive Spatial Areas to Control Smart Environments

TL;DR: This work has built a first Kinect-based prototype where users can define trigger areas and link them to suitable actions, and conducted a study to evaluate the usability of the system and how size and memorability of spaces affect user performance with regard to trigger area tasks.