• DocumentCode
    1082284
  • Title

    Methods for Presenting Braille Characters on a Mobile Device with a Touchscreen and Tactile Feedback

  • Author

    Rantala, Jussi ; Raisamo, Roope ; Lylykangas, Jani ; Surakka, Veikko ; Raisamo, Jukka ; Salminen, Katri ; Pakkanen, Toni ; Hippula, Arto

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Tampere, Tampere
  • Volume
    2
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2009
  • Firstpage
    28
  • Lastpage
    39
  • Abstract
    Three novel interaction methods were designed for reading six-dot Braille characters from the touchscreen of a mobile device. A prototype device with a piezoelectric actuator embedded under the touchscreen was used to create tactile feedback. The three interaction methods, scan, sweep, and rhythm, enabled users to read Braille characters one at a time either by exploring the characters dot by dot or by sensing a rhythmic pattern presented on the screen. The methods were tested with five blind Braille readers as a proof of concept. The results of the first experiment showed that all three methods can be used to convey information as the participants could accurately (91-97 percent) recognize individual characters. In the second experiment the presentation rate of the most efficient and preferred method, the rhythm, was varied. A mean recognition accuracy of 70 percent was found when the speed of presenting a single character was nearly doubled from the first experiment. The results showed that temporal tactile feedback and Braille coding can be used to transmit single-character information while further studies are still needed to evaluate the presentation of serial information, i.e., multiple Braille characters.
  • Keywords
    handicapped aids; haptic interfaces; interactive devices; touch sensitive screens; Braille coding; blind Braille readers; mean recognition accuracy; mobile device; piezoelectric actuator; rhythmic pattern; single-character information; six-dot Braille characters; tactile feedback; touchscreen; Actuators; Character recognition; Computer displays; Costs; Design methodology; Feedback; Headphones; Prototypes; Rhythm; Speech synthesis; Haptic I/O; Hardware and software that enable touch-based interactions with real; Human-computer interaction; Integrating touch-based interactions into various domains Assistive technology; Interaction styles; Tactile devices; Tactile display; and virtual enviro; remote;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Haptics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1939-1412
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TOH.2009.3
  • Filename
    4760140