Accessibility to graphical user interfaces by visually impaired persons is generally enabled through systems, which reproduce the lexical structure of the user interface to a non-visual form, mainly employing 3D audio output techniques. Two main critical issues have been identified: (i) most interfaces address the needs and abilities of sighted users and consequently the reproduction is only a translation from one language to another; (ii) blind users are generally not involved in the development stage due to the cost of prototyping. The present work proposes an interactive user interface to control a multi-sensory shower accessible by both sighted and blind users and able to adapt its control knob to reproduce Braille texts. Such function is realized by the integration of an electro-tactile feedback device and adopts soft touch finishing to better stimulate touch sensations. Haptic technologies have been exploited to create a virtual high-fidelity prototype to assess individual end-users’ response during the user interface design process. The paper illustrates the designed interface to assist blind users in home environments and the adopted virtual prototyping technique to address the above-mentioned issues.

An interactive virtual user interface for integrating blind persons in home environments / Mengoni, Maura; Peruzzini, Margherita; Raponi, Damiano; Cavalieri, Lorenzo. - ELETTRONICO. - 1B:(2015). (Intervento presentato al convegno ASME 2015 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences & Computers and Information in Engineering Conference tenutosi a Boston, USA nel 2-5 August) [10.1115/DETC2015-47132].

An interactive virtual user interface for integrating blind persons in home environments

MENGONI, MAURA;CAVALIERI, Lorenzo
2015-01-01

Abstract

Accessibility to graphical user interfaces by visually impaired persons is generally enabled through systems, which reproduce the lexical structure of the user interface to a non-visual form, mainly employing 3D audio output techniques. Two main critical issues have been identified: (i) most interfaces address the needs and abilities of sighted users and consequently the reproduction is only a translation from one language to another; (ii) blind users are generally not involved in the development stage due to the cost of prototyping. The present work proposes an interactive user interface to control a multi-sensory shower accessible by both sighted and blind users and able to adapt its control knob to reproduce Braille texts. Such function is realized by the integration of an electro-tactile feedback device and adopts soft touch finishing to better stimulate touch sensations. Haptic technologies have been exploited to create a virtual high-fidelity prototype to assess individual end-users’ response during the user interface design process. The paper illustrates the designed interface to assist blind users in home environments and the adopted virtual prototyping technique to address the above-mentioned issues.
2015
9780791857052
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11566/240907
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