SkipWriter: LLM-Powered Abbreviated Writing on Tablets
Abstract
Large Language Models (LLMs) may offer transformative opportunities for text input, especially for physically demanding modalities like handwriting. We studied a form of abbreviated handwriting by designing, developing and evaluating a prototype, named SkipWriter, that convert handwritten strokes of a variable-length, prefix- based abbreviation (e.g., “ho a y” as handwritten strokes) into the intended full phrase (e.g., “how are you” in the digital format) based
on preceding context. SkipWriter consists of an in-production hand-writing recognizer and a LLM fine-tuned on this skip-writing task. With flexible pen input, SkipWriter allows the user to add and revise prefix strokes when predictions don’t match the user’s intent. An user evaluation demonstrated a 60% reduction in motor movements with an average speed of 25.78 WPM. We also showed that this reduction is close to the ceiling of our model in an offline simulation.
on preceding context. SkipWriter consists of an in-production hand-writing recognizer and a LLM fine-tuned on this skip-writing task. With flexible pen input, SkipWriter allows the user to add and revise prefix strokes when predictions don’t match the user’s intent. An user evaluation demonstrated a 60% reduction in motor movements with an average speed of 25.78 WPM. We also showed that this reduction is close to the ceiling of our model in an offline simulation.