Appliance Displays: Accessibility Challenges and Proposed Solutions
Published: 2015
Publication Name: Proceedings of the 17th ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility (ASSETS '15)
Abstract:
People who are blind or visually impaired face difficulties using a growing array of everyday appliances because they are equipped with inaccessible electronic displays. We report developments on our –Display Reader– smartphone app, which uses computer vision to help a user acquire a usable image of a display and have the contents read aloud, to address this problem. Drawing on feedback from past and new studies with visually impaired volunteer participants, as well as from blind accessibility experts, we have improved and simplified our user interface and have also added the ability to read seven-segment digit displays. Our system works fully automatically and in real time, and we compare it with general-purpose assistive apps such as Be My Eyes, which recruit remote sighted assistants (RSAs) to answer questions about video captured by the user. Our discussions and preliminary experiment highlight the advantages and disadvantages of fully automatic approaches compared with RSAs, and suggest possible hybrid approaches to investigate in the future.
Citation: Fusco, G., Tekin, E., Giudice, N.A., and Coughlan, J.M. (2015). Appliance Displays: Accessibility Challenges and Proposed Solutions. Proceedings of the 17th ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility (ASSETS ’15), Pp 405-406.