Eye Tracking Based Directional Control System using Mobile Applications

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 365-374
Author(s):  
Rawan Ali Taban, et al.
Author(s):  
Victor Pomper

The 47 800-ton vessel Altair of the Compagnie Navale des Pétroles (C.N.P.) was the first oil-tanker to be equipped with a hydraulic remote-control system of cargo valves. The vessel was delivered at the beginning of May 1959. The opening and closing operations of the valves were controlled from a central panel which was fitted with manually operated directional control valves. The panel was located in the cargo valves' remote-control room which also housed the indispensable remote-controlled level-indicator board. Since then the application of hydraulic remote-controlled valves has become widespread and has taken one of two forms : that of a centralized control system or that of directional control valves located on the deck. Remote-controlled valves are either gate valves operated by a hydraulic cylinder, or butterfly valves operated by a hydraulic rotary actuator. The application of remote-control also allowed the setting up of the ‘free-flow’ system which uses hydraulically operated bulkhead valves. The first ‘free-flow’ oil-tanker was the Sirius of the C.N.P.; it was delivered in 1961. At present it appears that there exists an ever-increasing trend towards automation in the loading and unloading of tanker cargoes. This is accomplished by electrically operated directional control valves, which are connected with electrically programmed systems or with electronic servo-controls.


1997 ◽  
Vol 78 (6) ◽  
pp. 2985-2998 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerald L. Gottlieb ◽  
Qilai Song ◽  
Gil L. Almeida ◽  
Di-An Hong ◽  
Daniel Corcos

Gottlieb, Gerald L., Qilai Song, Gil L. Almeida, Di-an Hong, and Daniel Corcos. Directional control of planar human arm movement. J. Neurophysiol. 78: 2985–2998, 1997. We examined the patterns of joint kinematics and torques in two kinds of sagittal plane reaching movements. One consisted of movements from a fixed initial position with the arm partially outstretched, to different targets, equidistant from the initial position and located according to the hours of a clock. The other series added movements from different initial positions and directions and >40–80 cm distances. Dynamic muscle torque was calculated by inverse dynamic equations with the gravitational components removed. In making movements in almost every direction, the dynamic components of the muscle torques at both the elbow and shoulder were related almost linearly to each other. Both were similarly shaped, biphasic, almost synchronous and symmetrical pulses. These findings are consistent with our previously reported observations, which we termed a linear synergy. The relative scaling of the two joint torques changes continuously and regularly with movement direction. This was confirmed by calculating a vector defined by the dynamic components of the shoulder and elbow torques. The vector rotates smoothly about an ellipse in intrinsic, joint torque space as the direction of hand motion rotates about a circle in extrinsic Cartesian space. This confirms a second implication of linear synergy that the scaling constant between the linearly related joint torques is directionally dependent. Multiple linear regression showed that the torque at each joint scales as a simple linear function of the angular displacement at both joints, in spite of the complex nonlinear dynamics of multijoint movement. The coefficients of this function are independent of the initial arm position and movement distance and are the same for all subjects. This is an unanticipated finding. We discuss these observations in terms of the hypothesis that voluntary, multiple degrees of freedom, rapid reaching movements may use rule-based, feed-forward control of dynamic joint torque. Rule-based control of joint torque with separate dynamic and static controllers is an alternative to models such as those based on the equilibrium point hypotheses that rely on a positionally based controller to produce both dynamic and static torque components. It is also an alternative to feed-forward models that directly solve the problems of inverse dynamics. Our experimental findings are not necessarily incompatible with any of the alternative models, but they describe new, additional findings for which we need to account. The rules are chosen by the nervous system according to features of the kinematic task to couple muscle contraction at the shoulder and elbow in a linear synergy. Speed and load control preserves the relative magnitudes of the dynamic torques while directional control is accomplished by modulating them in a differential manner. This control system operates in parallel with a positional control system that solves the problems of postural stability.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sangbong Yoon ◽  
Hanbyul Yeon ◽  
Seongmin Jeong ◽  
Yun Jang

1993 ◽  
Vol 22 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 141-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. GUO ◽  
H. GUAN

2018 ◽  
Vol 06 (02) ◽  
pp. 50-55
Author(s):  
Salih Al-Qaraawi ◽  
Muayad Sadik Croock ◽  
Shahad Hussain Alawi

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 349-355
Author(s):  
Mateusz Kiryczuk ◽  
Paweł Kocyła ◽  
Mariusz Dzieńkowski

This paper concerns the study of user experience and focuses on two aspects i.e. usability and user satisfaction. Two mobile applications for monitoring human activity, Mi Fit and Google Fit, were tested. Both applications work with sports armbands. Two methods were used for the study: a questionnaire and eye tracking. The comparison of the applications was made on the basis of the collected results from questionnaires, measurements of task completion times and the number and type of errors detected. Nine respondents participated in the study. The Google Fit application received a higher average score for user satisfaction, fewer errors and shorter task completion times.


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