Publication | Closed Access
Evaluating Smartwatch-based Sound Feedback for Deaf and Hard-of-hearing Users Across Contexts
31
Citations
35
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
MusicPsychoacousticsEngineeringWearable TechnologyCommunicationSound FeedbackSound LoudnessSonificationSpeech PerceptionAuditory ModelingAssistive TechnologyAural AugmentationDesignArtsSmartwatch-based Sound FeedbackHuman HearingSoundscapeSpeech CommunicationHearing LossSpeech ProcessingHuman-computer InteractionTechnologySmartwatch Feedback Techniques
We present a qualitative study with 16 deaf and hard of hearing (DHH) participants examining reactions to smartwatch-based visual + haptic sound feedback designs. In Part 1, we conducted a Wizard-of-Oz (WoZ) evaluation of three smartwatch feedback techniques (visual alone, visual + simple vibration, and visual + tacton) and investigated vibrational patterns (tactons) to portray sound loudness, direction, and identity. In Part 2, we visited three public or semi-public locations where we demonstrated sound feedback on the smartwatch in situ to examine contextual influences and explore sound filtering options. Our findings characterize uses for vibration in multimodal sound awareness, both for push notification and for immediately actionable sound information displayed through vibrational patterns (tactons). In situ experiences caused participants to request sound filtering - particularly to limit haptic feedback - as a method for managing soundscape complexity. Additional concerns arose related to learnability, possibility of distraction, and system trust. Our findings have implications for future portable sound awareness systems.
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