A resistive touch screen panel is composed of two thin, metallic, electrically conductive layers separated by a narrow gap. When an object, such as a finger, presses down on a point on the panel's outer surface the two metallic layers become connected at that point and the panel then behaves as a pair of voltage dividers with connected outputs. This causes a change in the electrical current which is registered as a touch event and sent to the controller for processing. A capacitive touch screen panel is a sensor that is a capacitor in which plates include overlapping areas between the horizontal and vertical axes in a grid pattern. The human body also conducts electricity and a touch on the surface of the sensor will affect the electric field and create a measurable change in the capacitance of the device.
Some embodiments of the invention are described with respect to the following figures:
a is a display according to an exemplary embodiment of the invention;
b is a display according to an exemplary embodiment of the invention;
A touch screen can be used to activate items on a display. If an object contacts the display a signal can be sent to a computing device for presenting the location of the contact on the display. The location on the display may cause an item displayed on the display to be activated. For example, if the item is an icon for a program touching the display at the location of the icon may launch the program.
If the object unintentionally contacts the display unintentional operations may be generated by a computing device. For example an unintentional operation may be unintentionally launching an application, canceling a lengthy process or waking a computing device from a sleep state.
A display can include a three dimensional optical sensor to determine the depth an object that is captured by the optical sensor is from the optical sensor. If the contact by an object is a contaminant on the display then the size of the object or the distance the object extends from the display can be used to disregard the contact. The contaminant can be for example dust, dirt or insects. If the object is an insect and while contacting the display the insect does not extend to a programmed distance in front of the display the computing device can disregard the contact.
The resistive touch screen panel includes a glass panel that is covered with a conductive and a resistive metallic layer. These two layers are held apart by spacers, and a scratch-resistant layer is placed on top. An electrical current runs through the two layers while the display is operational. When a user touches the screen, the two layers make contact in that exact spot. The change in the electrical field is noted and the coordinates of the point of contact are calculated by the computer. In a capacitive system, a layer that stores electrical charge is placed on the glass panel of the display. When a user touches the display with their finger, some of the charge is transferred to the user, so the charge on the capacitive layer decreases. This decrease is measured in circuits located at each corner of the display.
Two dimensional optical touch systems may be used to determine where on a screen a touch occurs. A two dimensional optical touch system may include a light source that travels across the surface of the display and is received at the opposite side of the display. If an object interrupts the light then the receiver does not receive the light and a touch is registered at the location where light from two sources that are interrupted intersect. The light source and the receiver in an optical touch system are mounted in front of the transparent layer to allow the beams to travel along the surface of the transparent layer. Some optical sensors appear as a small wall around the perimeter of the display. Mounting the light sources and receivers in front of the glass allows contaminants to interfere with the light that is transmitted between the source and the receivers.
The resistive, capacitive and the two dimensional optical touch systems can determine the XY coordinate when an object contacts or is close to the display. The resistive, capacitive and the two dimensional optical touch systems do not determine the Z dimension (third dimension), the distance from the display.
If a contact with the display is disregarded based on the two dimensional size contacting the display a computing system may disregard an object that has a small two dimensional area in contact with the display. For example a stylus with a small two dimensional surface for contacting the display may be disregarded. If a contact with the display is disregarded based on a minimum contact time of the display, quick contacts may be disregarded. For example, if a user is playing a game that requires quick contact with a portion of the screen then the system may reject contact registered for too short a period of time.
Referring to the figures,
The three dimensional optical sensor 115 can determine the depth from the three dimensional optical sensor of an object located in the field of view 135 of the three dimensional optical sensor 115. The depth of the object can be used in one embodiment to determine if the object is in contact with the display. The depth of the object can be used in one embodiment to determine if the object extends from the display to a programmed distance 130 away from the display. For example the object 120 may be an insect on a transparent layer 105 but not extending from the transparent layer 105 to the programmed distance 130.
If the object 120 is within the field of view 135 of the three dimensional optical sensor 115, light from the light source 125 can reflect from the object and be captured by the three dimensional optical sensor 115. The distance the object 120 is from the three dimensional optical sensor 115 can be used to determine the size of the object. From the size of the object 120 the distance the object 120 extends from the display system 100 can be determined. If the object does not extend from the display to a programmed distance 130 a computing system may disregard the contact. If the object extends from the display to a programmed distance 130 a computing system may generate a button activation, which may be known as a mouse click at the location of the contact between the object 120 and the display. For example, if an insect contacts the display where an image of an icon is present the computing system may disregard the contact that does not extend to the programmed distance 130 but if a finger contacts the display where an image of an icon is present the computing system may activate the function represented by the icon, such as launching a program because the finger and hand extend beyond the programmed distance.
In some embodiments, a prism 112 is used to bend the reflected light from the object to the optical sensor. The prism 112 can allow the optical sensor to see along the surface of the transparent layer 105. The prism 112 can be attached to the transparent layer 105. The prism 112 is a transparent body that is bounded in part by two nonparallel plane faces and is used to refract or disperse a beam of light. In an embodiment the prism 112 refracts a beam of light emitted from a light source 125 through the transparent layer 105 to reflect from an object and return through the transparent layer 205 to the three dimensional optical sensor 115.
b includes a gap 114 between the transparent layer 105 and the panel 110. The gap allows the three dimensional optical sensor 115 to have a field of view of the transparent layer 105 from between the transparent layer 105 and the panel 110. The gap may be for example from 0.1 centimeters to 0.5 centimeters but the gap may be other amounts. The field of view of the three dimensional optical sensor 115 includes the perimeter 117 on the transparent layer 105.
In one embodiment, the optical sensor can be configured after attaching the optical sensor to the panel. For example, after attaching the optical sensor to the display a computer displaying information on the panel can be trained by displaying objects on the panel. The user can then contact the display where the objects are displayed on the panel and the computer can calibrate the optical sensor so that future contact with the display is interpreted by the computer as a contact of the display.
Two dimensional sensors that use a triangulation based methods such as stereo may involve intensive image processing to approximate the depth of objects. The two dimensional image processing uses data from a sensor and processes the data to generate data that is normally not available from a two dimensional sensor. Intensive image processing may not be used for a three dimensional sensor because the data from the three dimensional sensor includes depth data. For example, the image processing for a time of flight three dimensional optical sensor may involve a simple table-lookup to map the sensor reading to the distance of an object from the display. The time of flight sensor determines the depth from the sensor of an object from the time that it takes for light to travel from a known source, reflect from an object and return to the three dimensional optical sensor. The depth of an object in the image can be determined from the three dimensional optical sensor that does not use a second three dimensional optical sensor to determine the distance of the object in the image.
In an alternative embodiment the light source can emit structured light that is the projection of a light pattern such as a plane, grid, or more complex shape at a known angle onto an object. The way that the light pattern deforms when striking surfaces allows vision systems to calculate the depth and surface information of the objects in the scene. Integral Imaging is a technique which provides a full parallax stereoscopic view. To record the information of an object, a micro lens array in conjunction with a high resolution optical sensor is used. Due to a different position of each micro lens with respect to the imaged object, multiple perspectives of the object can be imaged onto an optical sensor. The recorded image that contains elemental images from each micro lens can be electronically transferred and then reconstructed in image processing. In some embodiments the integral imaging lenses can have different focal lengths and the objects depth is determined based on if the object is in focus, a focus sensor, or out of focus, a defocus sensor. The embodiments of the invention are not limited to the type of three dimensional optical sensors that have been described but may be any type of three dimensional sensor.
In one embodiment, there is a first three dimensional optical sensor 415 and a second three dimensional optical sensor 417. The first three dimensional optical sensor 415 may have a field of view 460. In an embodiment that includes a gap between the transparent layer 405 and the panel a portion of the field of view may be behind the transparent layer 405. Within the field of view 460 an image of object 420 is captured. A second object 422 cannot be seen by the first three dimensional optical sensor 415 because the first object 420 is between the first three dimensional optical sensor 415 and the second object 422. The field of view 460 is obstructed by the first object 420 along the portion 455 of the field of view 460 in the volume 465 beyond the first object 420. The second three dimensional optical sensor 417 can capture within its field of view an image including the depth of both the first object 420 and the second object 422. The first three dimensional optical sensor 415 can determine the distance of a first object 420, for example an insect. The first three dimensional optical sensor 415 may not be able to capture a second object 422, for example a finger on a user's hand if the view by the first three dimensional optical sensor 415 of the second object 422 is obstructed by a the first object 420. The first three dimensional optical sensor 415 and the second three dimensional optical sensor 417 may be in the corners of the display system 400 or the optical sensors may be located anywhere in or on the display such as the top, bottom, or sides.
A three dimensional optical sensor can be used to determine the size of objects because the depth from the optical sensor is known. If the depth from the optical sensor is not known the image of an object 420 may appear the same as a larger object 422 that is further away from the optical sensor 415. The size of the object may be used by the computing system to determine the type of object, such as a hand, finger, stylus, insect, contaminant or another object.
In one embodiment, a user may control functions such as volume by moving their hand in an upward or downward motion along the side 575 of the display system 500. The side of the display can be the area outside the perimeter of the panel 510 and may include the area beyond the transparent layer. Examples of other functions that may be controlled by a user's hand along the side of the display panel are media controls such as fast forward and rewind and presentation controls such as moving to the next slide or a previous slide. If an object is moving near the side of the display such as an insect flying near the side of the display the computing system can disregard the object if the object does not extend to the programmed distance.
A user may program functions that the computer implements upon detecting certain movements. For example, a user may flip the page of the document on the display by moving their hand above the display from right to left to turn to the next page or left to right to turn to the previous page. In another example a user may move their hands in a motion that represents grabbing an object on the screen and rotating the object to rotate the object in a clockwise or counterclockwise direction. The user interface can allow the user to change the results of the hand motions that are detected by the three dimensional optical sensor. For example if the user moves their hand in front of the display in a right to left direction the computer can be programmed to interpret the motion as the flipping of a page or as closing a document. If an object is moving in front of the display such as an insect flying in front of the display the computing system can disregard the object if the object does not extend to the programmed distance. In one embodiment the depth signature of objects are stored on the computing system. The depth signature is depth information of a type of object. For example the depth signature of a hand is different than the depth signature of a contaminant such as an insect. The depth information from the three dimensional optical sensor can be compared to the depth signature information on a computing system to determine the type of object. For example, a computer may disregard objects that have depth signatures of a contaminant or a computer may disregard an object that does not have a depth signature of a non-contaminant such as a hand. A computer may disregard objects moving in front of the display system if the depth information of the object compared the depth signature of a contaminant.
The controller 680 can receive data captured by the three dimensional optical sensor module 625 through the communication port 670 of the input output controller 675. The controller 680 can determine from the data captured by the three dimensional optical sensor module 600 the distance an object is from the optical sensor module 600. The controller 680 can determine the distance the object is from a display based on the distance the object is from the three dimensional optical sensor module 600. In one embodiment, the controller 680 is a processor or an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC).
A computing system including the controller 680 can use the data to determine if a contact with the display can be disregarded. For example the data may include the size of an object. If the size of the object does not extent from the display to the programmed distance the contact with the display can be disregarded.
The computing device can disregard a contact with the display if the object in contact with the display does not extend from the display to a programmed distance from the display (at 730). In one embodiment the contact is disregarded for the purpose of activating a computer function represented by an image of an icon at the location of the contact of the display but the display may use the contact to indicate to a user a contaminant on the display. For example an indicator, such as a circle, may be displayed at the location of the contaminant on the display.
The techniques described above may be embodied in a computer-readable medium for configuring a computing system to execute the method. The computer readable media may include, for example and without limitation, any number of the following: magnetic storage media including disk and tape storage media; optical storage media such as compact disk media (e.g., CD-ROM, CD-R, etc.) and digital video disk storage media; holographic memory; nonvolatile memory storage media including semiconductor-based memory units such as FLASH memory, EEPROM, EPROM, ROM; ferromagnetic digital memories; volatile storage media including registers, buffers or caches, main memory, RAM, etc.; and the Internet, just to name a few. Other new and various types of computer-readable media may be used to store and/or transmit the software modules discussed herein. Computing systems may be found in many forms including but not limited to mainframes, minicomputers, servers, workstations, personal computers, notepads, personal digital assistants, various wireless devices and embedded systems, just to name a few.
In the foregoing description, numerous details are set forth to provide an understanding of the present invention. However, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these details. While the invention has been disclosed with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art will appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is intended that the appended claims cover such modifications and variations as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2009/051587 | 7/23/2009 | WO | 00 | 1/23/2012 |