Seeing our Blind Spots: Smart Glasses-based Simulation to Increase Design Students Awareness of Visual Impairment

要旨

As the population ages, many will acquire visual impairments. To improve design for these users, it is essential to build awareness of their perspective during everyday routines, especially for design students. Although several visual impairment simulation toolkits exist in both academia and as commercial products, analog, and static visual impairment simulation tools do not simulate effects concerning the user's eye movements. Meanwhile, VR and video see-through-based AR simulation methods are constrained by smaller fields of view when compared with the natural human visual field and also suffer from vergence-accommodation conflict (VAC) which correlates with visual fatigue, headache, and dizziness. In this paper, we enable an on-the-go, VAC-free, visually impaired experience by leveraging our optical see-through glasses. The FOV of our glasses is approximately 160 degrees for horizontal and 140 degrees for vertical, and participants can experience both losses of central vision and loss of peripheral vision at different severities. Our evaluation (n =14) indicates that the glasses can significantly and effectively reduce visual acuity and visual field without causing typical motion sickness symptoms such as headaches and or visual fatigue. Questionnaires and qualitative feedback also showed how the glasses helped to increase participants’ awareness of visual impairment.

著者
Qing Zhang
Keio University, Yokohama, Japan
Kai Kunze
Keio University, Tokyo, Japan
Giulia Barbareschi
Keio University, Yokohama, Japan
Yun Suen Pai
Keio University Graduate School of Media Design, Yokohama, Japan
Jamie A. Ward
Goldsmiths University of London, London, United Kingdom
Yifei Huang
The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
Juling Li
Keio University, Yokohama, Japan
論文URL

https://doi.org/10.1145/3526113.3545687

会議: UIST 2022

The ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology

セッション: Accessibility

6 件の発表
2022-11-01 18:00:00
2022-11-01 19:30:00