Publication | Closed Access
Text entry from power wheelchairs: edgewrite for joysticks and touchpads
72
Citations
20
References
2003
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringJoystick WivikWearable TechnologyMotor ControlJoystick EdgewriteKinesiologyTouch User InterfaceComputer AccessibilityPower Wheelchair JoysticksMultimodal Human Computer InterfaceHealth SciencesAssistive TechnologyInput DeviceRehabilitationNovel InterfaceEye TrackingAssistive DeviceHuman-computer InteractionTechnologyRoboticsText Entry
Power wheelchair joysticks have been used to control a mouse cursor on desktop computers, but they offer no integrated text entry solution, confining users to point-and-click or point-and-dwell with on-screen keyboards. But on-screen keyboards reduce useful screen real-estate, exacerbate the need for frequent window management, and impose a second focus of attention. By contrast, we present two integrated gestural text entry methods designed for use from power wheelchairs: one for joysticks and the other for touchpads. Both techniques are adaptations of EdgeWrite, originally a stylus-based unistroke method designed for people with tremor. In a preliminary study of 7 power wheelchair users, we found that touchpad EdgeWrite was faster than joystick WiVik, and joystick EdgeWrite was only slightly slower after minimal practice. These findings reflect "walk up and use"-ability and warrant further investigation into extended use.
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