Publication | Closed Access
Deaf and Hard-of-hearing Individuals' Preferences for Wearable and Mobile Sound Awareness Technologies
75
Citations
36
References
2019
Year
Unknown Venue
Haptic FeedbackEngineeringMobile InteractionAmbient DisplayWearable TechnologyUser-centered DesignCommunicationHard-of-hearing IndividualsHealth SciencesAssistive TechnologyAural AugmentationAudiologyDesignUser ExperienceHuman-centered ComputingHuman-centered DesignDhh ParticipantsHearing ConservationHuman HearingSpeech CommunicationHearing LossTechnologyHuman-computer InteractionSpeech PerceptionAffect PerceptionSound Awareness Technologies
To investigate preferences for mobile and wearable sound awareness systems, we conducted an online survey with 201 DHH participants. The survey explores how demographic factors affect perceptions of sound awareness technologies, gauges interest in specific sounds and sound characteristics, solicits reactions to three design scenarios (smartphone, smartwatch, head-mounted display) and two output modalities (visual, haptic), and probes issues related to social context of use. While most participants were highly interested in being aware of sounds, this interest was modulated by communication preference--that is, for sign or oral communication or both. Almost all participants wanted both visual and haptic feedback and 75% preferred to have that feedback on separate devices (e.g., haptic on smartwatch, visual on head-mounted display). Other findings related to sound type, full captions vs. keywords, sound filtering, notification styles, and social context provide direct guidance for the design of future mobile and wearable sound awareness systems.
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