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Re: That study about the locations of the body that move

From: Sebastien Duval <>
Date: Thu, 09 Mar 2006 08:56:36 +0900

I suppose you are talking about the following paper.

Source: 
http://csdl2.computer.org/persagen/DLAbsToc.jsp?resourcePath=/dl/proceedings/iswc/&toc=comp/proceedings/iswc/1998/9074/00/9074toc.xml&DOI=10.1109/ISWC.1998.729537
> Second International Symposium on Wearable Computers (ISWC'98)    p.
> 116 Design for Wearability F. Gemperle C. Kasabach J. Stivoric M.
> Bauer R. Martin
> 
> DOI Bookmark:
> http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ISWC.1998.729537
> 
> Citation:  F. Gemperle, C. Kasabach, J. Stivoric, M. Bauer, R.
> Martin, "Design for Wearability," iswc, p. 116,  Second International
> Symposium on Wearable Computers (ISWC'98),  1998.

It is pretty interesting; let me know if you find other things in this 
style.

-- 
Sebastien Duval, from Tokyo (Japan)
SOKENDAI - National Institute of Informatics

-------- Original Message --------
Date: 2006/03/09 7:12
From: Tony Havelka
>> A few years back, some university (I think) did a study on the
>> locations of the body that moved the least.  I want to say it was
>> the University of Washington HIT Lab (hitl.washington.edu) but
>> regardless, I can't find it after many hours of searching, nor
>> looking through the wear-hard archives at wearables.blu.org.  I
>> could have sworn it was discussed on the list (at least mentioned!)
>> through...
>> 
>> Does anyone remember this?  A title, who wrote it, the university,
>> have a copy, anything?
> 
> Carnegie Mellon....
> 
> Couldn't find the link on the CM web page but check this link out:
> 
> http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,50975,00.html
> 
> 
> -Tony

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