1 / 12

Labanotation for Design of Movement-Based Interaction

Labanotation for Design of Movement-Based Interaction. Advisor : Dr. Hsu Presenter : Chia-Hao Yang Author : Lian Loke, Astrid T. Larssen, Toni Robertson. SIGCHI . Outline. Motivation Objective Introduction Method Examples of labanotation Discussion Conclusions. Motivation.

hailey
Download Presentation

Labanotation for Design of Movement-Based Interaction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Labanotation for Design of Movement-Based Interaction Advisor : Dr. Hsu Presenter : Chia-Hao Yang Author : Lian Loke, Astrid T. Larssen, Toni Robertson SIGCHI 

  2. Outline • Motivation • Objective • Introduction • Method • Examples of labanotation • Discussion • Conclusions

  3. Motivation • The design of movement-based interaction with technology is an emerging area that calls for a renewed focus on the active human body and its capacity for movement.

  4. Objective • The aim of this study was to gain an understanding of the potential usefulness of Labanotation for the design of physical or movement-based interaction with computer technology.

  5. Introduction • The established movement notations have arisen out of dance choreography and include : • Benesh : English classical ballet • Eshkol-Wachmann • Labanotation • It includes three forms of movement description: • Motif : it’s a kind of simplified "Structural Description“ • you only write down what you think of as important • Effort-Sharp : it describes the inner attitude of the mover • Effort & Sharp • Structural : A way of writing which tries to record every aspect of motion as precisely as possible • http://user.uni-frankfurt.de/~griesbec/LABANE.HTML#Floor

  6. Method • It involved the use of Labanotation for analyzing and transcribing movements produced by interaction with the Eyetoy interface. • The two games are : • Beat Freak • Kung Foo • Process • There are 8 players were recruited to play the two games. After playing, the participants were interviewed and their action will be analyzed.

  7. Examples of labanotation • Strike moving object at fixed target in beat freak

  8. Examples of labanotation (cont.) • Strike moving target in kung foo

  9. Examples of labanotation (cont.) • Each action was performed by each participant with idiosyncratic movement styles.

  10. Discussion • Functional and performed movement • It can distinguish between the two types • Simplicity and specificity • It’s an extensive and flexible notation system • Context of movement • Reading and writing • Once the notation system is learned, the body staff then becomes a strong graphic pattern • Comparison can be made easily

  11. Conclusions • The findings from our study suggest that Labanotation is a potentially useful tool to support the design of movement-based interaction such as the Eyetoy games.

  12. Labanotation • It is a system of analysing and recording movement, originally devised by Rudolf Laban in the 1920. • Similar to music notation Labanotation uses a staff. The score is read from the bottom to the top of the page. • L = Left side • C = Centerlinie • R = Right side • 1 = Support column • 2 = Leg gesture column • 3 = Body column • 4 = Arm column • 5 = Hand column • example

More Related