Sciweavers

ASSETS
2015
ACM

Supporting Everyday Activities for Persons with Visual Impairments Through Computer Vision-Augmented Touch

8 years 10 days ago
Supporting Everyday Activities for Persons with Visual Impairments Through Computer Vision-Augmented Touch
The HandSight project investigates how wearable micro-cameras can be used to augment a blind or visually impaired user’s sense of touch with computer vision. Our goal is to support an array of activities of daily living by sensing and feeding back non-tactile information (e.g., color, printed text, patterns) about an object as it is touched. In this poster paper, we provide an overview of the project, our current proof-of-concept prototype, and a summary of findings from finger-based text reading studies. As this is an early-stage project, we also enumerate current open questions. Categories and Subject Descriptors K.4.2 [Computer and Society]: Social Issues – Assistive technologies for persons with disabilities Keywords Blind; visually impaired; wearable computing; computer vision; vision-augmented touch
Leah Findlater, Lee Stearns, Ruofei Du, Uran Oh, D
Added 16 Apr 2016
Updated 16 Apr 2016
Type Journal
Year 2015
Where ASSETS
Authors Leah Findlater, Lee Stearns, Ruofei Du, Uran Oh, David Ross, Rama Chellappa, Jon Froehlich
Comments (0)