Publication | Open Access
Review of Quantitative Empirical Evaluations of Technology for People with Visual Impairments
66
Citations
68
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringDisabilityImpaired PeopleEducationVisual ImpairmentsData ScienceComputer AccessibilityQuantitative Empirical EvaluationsAssistive TechnologyOphthalmologyUser ExperienceUser EvaluationRehabilitationVisual ImpairmentMobile AccessibilityVisual FunctionEye TrackingHuman-computer InteractionTechnologyUser-centric EvaluationQuantitative Empirical Evaluation
Addressing the needs of visually impaired people is of continued interest in Human Computer Interaction (HCI) research. Yet, one of the major challenges facing researchers in this field continues to be how to design adequate quantitative empirical evaluation for these users in HCI. In this paper, we analyse a corpus of 178 papers on technologies designed for people with visual impairments, published since 1988, and including at least one quantitative empirical evaluation (243 evaluations in total). To inform future research in this area, we provide an overview, historic trends and a unified terminology to design and report quantitative empirical evaluations. We identify open issues and propose a set of guidelines to address them. Our analysis aims to facilitate and stimulate future research on this topic.
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