Communicating with drones using facial expressions and gestures could help save lives
https://phys.org/news/2018-07-drones-facial-gestures.html
"Most commercial drones today come with controllers which work really well, but sometimes you may find yourself in a situation where your hands are busy," notes computing science professor Richard Vaughan, who leads this research.
"Or maybe you weren't expecting to interact with a drone today so you don't have special equipment with you. We'd like to be able to command drones in these situations and make the interaction natural and intuitive."
Communicating with drones using facial expressions and gestures could help save lives
Jul 25, 2018, 2:34pm UTC
https://phys.org/news/2018-07-drones-facial-gestures.html
> "Most commercial drones today come with controllers which work really well, but sometimes you may find yourself in a situation where your hands are busy," notes computing science professor Richard Vaughan, who leads this research.
> "Or maybe you weren't expecting to interact with a drone today so you don't have special equipment with you. We'd like to be able to command drones in these situations and make the interaction natural and intuitive."