Haptic Vision: Augmenting Non-visual Travel Tools, Techniques, and Methods by Increasing Spatial Knowledge Through Dynamic Haptic Interactions

abstract: Access to real-time situational information including the relative position and motion of surrounding objects is critical for safe and independent travel. Object or obstacle (OO) detection at a distance is primarily a task of the visual system due to the high resolution information the eye...

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Other Authors: Duarte, Bryan Joiner (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62982
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-629822021-01-15T05:00:44Z Haptic Vision: Augmenting Non-visual Travel Tools, Techniques, and Methods by Increasing Spatial Knowledge Through Dynamic Haptic Interactions abstract: Access to real-time situational information including the relative position and motion of surrounding objects is critical for safe and independent travel. Object or obstacle (OO) detection at a distance is primarily a task of the visual system due to the high resolution information the eyes are able to receive from afar. As a sensory organ in particular, the eyes have an unparalleled ability to adjust to varying degrees of light, color, and distance. Therefore, in the case of a non-visual traveler, someone who is blind or low vision, access to visual information is unattainable if it is positioned beyond the reach of the preferred mobility device or outside the path of travel. Although, the area of assistive technology in terms of electronic travel aids (ETA’s) has received considerable attention over the last two decades; surprisingly, the field has seen little work in the area focused on augmenting rather than replacing current non-visual travel techniques, methods, and tools. Consequently, this work describes the design of an intuitive tactile language and series of wearable tactile interfaces (the Haptic Chair, HaptWrap, and HapBack) to deliver real-time spatiotemporal data. The overall intuitiveness of the haptic mappings conveyed through the tactile interfaces are evaluated using a combination of absolute identification accuracy of a series of patterns and subjective feedback through post-experiment surveys. Two types of spatiotemporal representations are considered: static patterns representing object location at a single time instance, and dynamic patterns, added in the HaptWrap, which represent object movement over a time interval. Results support the viability of multi-dimensional haptics applied to the body to yield an intuitive understanding of dynamic interactions occurring around the navigator during travel. Lastly, it is important to point out that the guiding principle of this work centered on providing the navigator with spatial knowledge otherwise unattainable through current mobility techniques, methods, and tools, thus, providing the \emph{navigator} with the information necessary to make informed navigation decisions independently, at a distance. Dissertation/Thesis Duarte, Bryan Joiner (Author) McDaniel, Troy (Advisor) Davulcu, Hasan (Committee member) Li, Baoxin (Committee member) Venkateswara, Hemanth (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Computer science Engineering assistive technology blind electronic travel aid haptics travel wearable eng 137 pages Doctoral Dissertation Computer Science 2020 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62982 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Computer science
Engineering
assistive technology
blind
electronic travel aid
haptics
travel
wearable
spellingShingle Computer science
Engineering
assistive technology
blind
electronic travel aid
haptics
travel
wearable
Haptic Vision: Augmenting Non-visual Travel Tools, Techniques, and Methods by Increasing Spatial Knowledge Through Dynamic Haptic Interactions
description abstract: Access to real-time situational information including the relative position and motion of surrounding objects is critical for safe and independent travel. Object or obstacle (OO) detection at a distance is primarily a task of the visual system due to the high resolution information the eyes are able to receive from afar. As a sensory organ in particular, the eyes have an unparalleled ability to adjust to varying degrees of light, color, and distance. Therefore, in the case of a non-visual traveler, someone who is blind or low vision, access to visual information is unattainable if it is positioned beyond the reach of the preferred mobility device or outside the path of travel. Although, the area of assistive technology in terms of electronic travel aids (ETA’s) has received considerable attention over the last two decades; surprisingly, the field has seen little work in the area focused on augmenting rather than replacing current non-visual travel techniques, methods, and tools. Consequently, this work describes the design of an intuitive tactile language and series of wearable tactile interfaces (the Haptic Chair, HaptWrap, and HapBack) to deliver real-time spatiotemporal data. The overall intuitiveness of the haptic mappings conveyed through the tactile interfaces are evaluated using a combination of absolute identification accuracy of a series of patterns and subjective feedback through post-experiment surveys. Two types of spatiotemporal representations are considered: static patterns representing object location at a single time instance, and dynamic patterns, added in the HaptWrap, which represent object movement over a time interval. Results support the viability of multi-dimensional haptics applied to the body to yield an intuitive understanding of dynamic interactions occurring around the navigator during travel. Lastly, it is important to point out that the guiding principle of this work centered on providing the navigator with spatial knowledge otherwise unattainable through current mobility techniques, methods, and tools, thus, providing the \emph{navigator} with the information necessary to make informed navigation decisions independently, at a distance. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Computer Science 2020
author2 Duarte, Bryan Joiner (Author)
author_facet Duarte, Bryan Joiner (Author)
title Haptic Vision: Augmenting Non-visual Travel Tools, Techniques, and Methods by Increasing Spatial Knowledge Through Dynamic Haptic Interactions
title_short Haptic Vision: Augmenting Non-visual Travel Tools, Techniques, and Methods by Increasing Spatial Knowledge Through Dynamic Haptic Interactions
title_full Haptic Vision: Augmenting Non-visual Travel Tools, Techniques, and Methods by Increasing Spatial Knowledge Through Dynamic Haptic Interactions
title_fullStr Haptic Vision: Augmenting Non-visual Travel Tools, Techniques, and Methods by Increasing Spatial Knowledge Through Dynamic Haptic Interactions
title_full_unstemmed Haptic Vision: Augmenting Non-visual Travel Tools, Techniques, and Methods by Increasing Spatial Knowledge Through Dynamic Haptic Interactions
title_sort haptic vision: augmenting non-visual travel tools, techniques, and methods by increasing spatial knowledge through dynamic haptic interactions
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62982
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