DocumentCode
1228752
Title
Graphical Tactile Displays for Visually-Impaired People
Author
Vidal-VerdÙ, Fernando ; Hafez, Moustapha
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electron., Malaga Univ.
Volume
15
Issue
1
fYear
2007
fDate
3/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
119
Lastpage
130
Abstract
This paper presents an up-to-date survey of graphical tactile displays. These devices provide information through the sense of touch. At best, they should display both text and graphics (text may be considered a type of graphic). Graphs made with shapeable sheets result in bulky items awkward to store and transport; their production is expensive and time-consuming and they deteriorate quickly. Research is ongoing for a refreshable tactile display that acts as an output device for a computer or other information source and can present the information in text and graphics. The work in this field has branched into diverse areas, from physiological studies to technological aspects and challenges. Moreover, interest in these devices is now being shown by other fields such as virtual reality, minimally invasive surgery and teleoperation. It is attracting more and more people, research and money. Many proposals have been put forward, several of them succeeding in the task of presenting tactile information. However, most are research prototypes and very expensive to produce commercially. Thus the goal of an efficient low-cost tactile display for visually-impaired people has not yet been reached
Keywords
graphical user interfaces; handicapped aids; haptic interfaces; graphical tactile displays; minimally invasive surgery; teleoperation; virtual reality; visually impaired people; Actuators; Biomedical monitoring; Computer displays; Computer graphics; Costs; Fingers; Mice; Minimally invasive surgery; Production; Virtual reality; Aids for the handicapped; biomedical engineering; microactuators; tactile displays; Communication Aids for Disabled; Computer Graphics; Computer Peripherals; Data Display; Equipment Design; Humans; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Technology Assessment, Biomedical; Touch; User-Computer Interface; Vision Disorders;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2007.891375
Filename
4126548
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