DocumentCode
948623
Title
How Accurately People can Discriminate the Differences of Floor Materials With Various Elasticities
Author
Kobayashi, Yoshiyuki ; Osaka, Rei ; Hara, Toshiaki ; Fujimoto, Hiroshi
Author_Institution
Nat. Rehabilitation Center, Saitama
Volume
16
Issue
1
fYear
2008
Firstpage
99
Lastpage
105
Abstract
Tactile ground surface indicators installed on sidewalks help visually impaired people walk safely. However, these indicators sometimes cause the nonvisually impaired to stumble. Thus, these indicators also have to be made safer and less of a problem for those who do not use them. There are several facilities in Japan that have installed floor materials of different elasticity to indicate paths for the visually impaired. However, the effectiveness of this method has not been tested. Therefore, this study examined how accurately people can discriminate differences in the elasticity of flooring samples. Flooring samples of different elasticity were presented by placing two walking boards made of plywood, each surfaced with one of three different flooring samples, in an end-to-end fashion. Ten young adults whose sight was temporarily cutoff by eye masks were asked to walk on the path for 144 trials and indicate whether the flooring samples were different or not. Interestingly, the percentages of correct answers were high for most pairs of samples. Moreover, there was a strong positive correlation between the percentage of correct answers and the magnitude of difference in floor elasticity. These results indicate that people can distinguish changes of flooring samples fairly accurately, even when there are no convexities, if there is sufficient difference in elasticity between the flooring samples.
Keywords
elasticity; eye; floors; gait analysis; sensory aids; touch (physiological); Japan; eye masks; floor elasticity; floor materials discrimination; plywood; sensory aids; sensory-motor systems; tactile ground surface indicators; visual aids; visually impaired people walking; walking boards; young adults subjects; Mobility & Sensory Aids; Mobility and sensory aids; Sensory-Motor Systems and Rehabilitation; Tactile Ground Surface Indicators; Visual Aids; sensory-motor systems and rehabilitation; tactile ground surface indicators; visual aids; Adult; Analysis of Variance; Discrimination (Psychology); Elasticity; Humans; Perception; Pilot Projects; Touch; Walking;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2007.910283
Filename
4359238
Link To Document