M
Marcos Serrano
Researcher at University of Toulouse
Publications - 79
Citations - 1187
Marcos Serrano is an academic researcher from University of Toulouse. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Mobile device. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 70 publications receiving 861 citations. Previous affiliations of Marcos Serrano include University of Grenoble & Télécom ParisTech.
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
Exploring the use of hand-to-face input for interacting with head-worn displays
TL;DR: This work proposes the use of Hand-to-Face input, a method to interact with head-worn displays (HWDs) that involves contact with the face, and provides a set of guidelines for developing effective Hand- to-Face interaction techniques.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Grand Challenges in Immersive Analytics
Barrett Ens,Benjamin Bach,Maxime Cordeil,Ulrich Engelke,Marcos Serrano,Wesley Willett,Arnaud Prouzeau,Christoph Anthes,Wolfgang Büschel,Cody Dunne,Tim Dwyer,Jens Grubert,Jason H. Haga,Nurit Kirshenbaum,Dylan Kobayashi,Tica Lin,Monsurat Olaosebikan,Fabian Pointecker,David Saffo,Nazmus Saquib,Dieter Schmalstieg,Danielle Albers Szafir,Matt Whitlock,Yalong Yang +23 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present 17 key research challenges developed over multiple sessions by a diverse group of 24 international experts, initiated from a virtual scientific workshop at ACM CHI 2020, aiming to coordinate future work by providing a systematic roadmap of current directions and impending hurdles to facilitate productive and effective applications for immersive analytics.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
The openinterface framework: a tool for multimodal interaction.
Marcos Serrano,Laurence Nigay,Jean-Yves Lionel Lawson,Andrew Ramsay,Roderick Murray-Smith,Sebastian Denef +5 more
TL;DR: The OpenInterface (OI) framework is described, a component-based tool for rapidly developing multimodal input interfaces and two exploratory test-beds developed using the OpenInterface Interaction Development Environment.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Movement qualities as interaction modality
TL;DR: A user experiment showed that an interaction based on movement qualities tends to enhance the user experience favouring explorative and expressive usage.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Tangible Reels: Construction and Exploration of Tangible Maps by Visually Impaired Users
TL;DR: A tangible tabletop interface that enables visually impaired users to build tangible maps on their own, using a new type of physical icon called Tangible Reels, and validated that the designed system, including non-visual interactions, enabling visually impaired participants to quickly build and explore maps of various complexities.