Publication | Open Access
Wearable interfaces for orientation and wayfinding
147
Citations
10
References
2000
Year
Unknown Venue
Wearable SystemEngineeringWearable TechnologyCritical Test SettingEducationWearable ComputerStereophonic Sonic GuideKinesiologyComputer AccessibilitySevere Visual ImpairmentWearable InterfacesKinematicsMultimodal Human Computer InterfaceAssistive TechnologyDesignRehabilitationMobile AccessibilitySpeech CommunicationNovel InterfaceAssistive DeviceHuman-computer Interaction
People with severe visual impairment need a means of remaining oriented to their environment as they move through it. Three wearable orientation interfaces were developed and evaluated toward this purpose: a stereophonic sonic guide (sonic ?carrot?), speech output, and shoulder-tapping system. Street crossing was used as a critical test setting in which to evaluate these interfaces. The shoulder-tapping system was found most universally usable. Considering the great variety of co-morbidities within this population, the authors concluded that a combined tapping/speech interface would provide usability and flexibility to the greatest number of people under the widest range of environmental conditions.
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