Publications by authors named "Eduardo Velloso"

Short bursts of repeating patterns [intervals of recurrence (IoR)] manifest themselves in many applications, such as in the time-series data captured from an athlete's movements using a wearable sensor while performing exercises. We present an efficient, online, one-pass, and real-time algorithm for finding and tracking IoR in a time-series data stream. We provide a detailed theoretical analysis of the behavior of any IoR and derive fundamental properties that can be used on real-world data streams.

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Background: The use of location-based data in clinical settings is often limited to real-time monitoring. In this study, we aim to develop a proximity-based localization system and show how its longitudinal deployment can provide operational insights related to staff and patients' mobility and room occupancy in clinical settings. Such a streamlined data-driven approach can help in increasing the uptime of operating rooms and more broadly provide an improved understanding of facility utilization.

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The presence of fully-occluded targets is common within virtual environments, ranging from a virtual object located behind a wall to a datapoint of interest hidden in a complex visualization. However, efficient input techniques for locating and selecting these targets are mostly underexplored in virtual reality (VR) systems. In this paper, we developed an initial set of seven techniques techniques for fully-occluded target selection in VR.

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Reaching towards out-of-sight objects during walking is a common task in daily life, however the same task can be challenging when wearing immersive Head-Mounted Displays (HMD). In this paper, we investigate the effects of spatial reference frame, walking path curvature, and target placement relative to the body on user performance of manually acquiring out-of-sight targets located around their bodies, as they walk in a spatial-mapping Mixed Reality (MR) environment wearing an immersive HMD. We found that walking and increased path curvature negatively affected the overall spatial accuracy of the performance, and that the performance benefited more from using the torso as the reference frame than the head.

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