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Virtual Dictionary
Control Sensitivity Control sensitivity is essentially the degree of movement necessary before a control detects a change. With one way controls such as movement sensors, this is simply a measure of how far the user has to move before the control responds. Below, we offer a selection of links from our resource databases which may match this term.
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Entries for Control Sensitivity:
Resources
in our database matching the Term Control Sensitivity:
Results by page [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() A short article on the delicate balance of control between player/participants and staff. Maintaining control without interference. ![]() ![]() ![]() It often seems that scarcely a week goes by without word of a minor or major breakthrough in gesture control of computer systems, speech recognition, or speech synthesis systems. All seem to be vectoring in on the ability to control computers entirely hands-off. ![]() ![]() ![]() A potential concern has been found in the psychological implications of gesture control interfaces. When we design such things we must be aware of a power some gestures have, to alter the perceptions and memories of those who witness them. ![]() An excellent, easy-to-follow look at using neural networks to control the movement of AI vehicles (or dragons, or whatever). Includes careful break down of how neural networks work, and carries a gradual learning curve upwards.
Industry
News containing the Term Control Sensitivity:
Results by page (03/02/2009)
In a novel approach to memory writing, US Department of Energy-funded researchers have discovered a way to control the rotation of "magnetic tornadoes" in a way that could enable writing and reading digital information with greater sensit...
(27/10/2011)
A new screen has been designed that can work with gloved hands, and it comes from Japan-based SMK. The target application will be car-navigation systems which drivers can operate while wearing gloves. The new screen is described as having a...
(09/03/2013)
University of Miami (UM) Psychologist Alexandra L. Quittner leads one of the largest, most nationally representative studies of the effects of parenting on very young, deaf children who have received cochlear implants. The findings indicate...
(01/01/2009)
A team of Johns Hopkins neuroscientists has worked out how some newly discovered light sensors in the eye detect light and communicate with the brain. The report appears online this week in Nature. These light sensors are a s...
(29/11/2009)
Given Imaging out of Yoqneam, Israel is releasing a new version of PillCam Colon, an endoscopic capsule designed for imaging of the large intestine. The PillCam COLON 2 has recently received European approval and was just unveiled at the Ga...
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