Turn-by-turn navigation is a useful paradigm for assisting people with visual impairments during mobility as it reduces the cognitive load of having to simultaneously sense, localize and plan. To realize such a system, it is necessary to be able to automatically localize the user with sufficient accuracy, provide timely and efficient instructions and have the ability to easily deploy the system to new spaces. We propose a smartphone-based system that provides turnby-turn navigation assistance based on accurate real-time localization over large spaces. In addition to basic navigation capabilities, our system also informs the user about nearby points-of-interest (POI) and accessibility issues (e.g., stairs ahead). After deploying the system on a university campus across several indoor and outdoor areas, we evaluated it with six blind subjects and showed that our system is capable of guiding visually impaired users in complex and unfamiliar environments.

NavCog: A Navigational Cognitive Assistant for the Blind / D. Ahmetovic, C. Gleason, C. Ruan, K. Kitani, H. Takagi, C. Asakawa - In: MobileHCI '16 : Proceedings[s.l] : ACM, 2016. - ISBN 9781450344081. - pp. 90-99 (( Intervento presentato al 18. convegno International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction with Mobile Devices and Services tenutosi a Firenze nel 2016 [10.1145/2935334.2935361].

NavCog: A Navigational Cognitive Assistant for the Blind

D. Ahmetovic;
2016

Abstract

Turn-by-turn navigation is a useful paradigm for assisting people with visual impairments during mobility as it reduces the cognitive load of having to simultaneously sense, localize and plan. To realize such a system, it is necessary to be able to automatically localize the user with sufficient accuracy, provide timely and efficient instructions and have the ability to easily deploy the system to new spaces. We propose a smartphone-based system that provides turnby-turn navigation assistance based on accurate real-time localization over large spaces. In addition to basic navigation capabilities, our system also informs the user about nearby points-of-interest (POI) and accessibility issues (e.g., stairs ahead). After deploying the system on a university campus across several indoor and outdoor areas, we evaluated it with six blind subjects and showed that our system is capable of guiding visually impaired users in complex and unfamiliar environments.
Assistive technologies; Bluetooth low-energy beacons; Turn-by-turn navigation; Navigation assistance; Visual impairments; Localization; Real world accessibility
Settore INF/01 - Informatica
2016
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/697953
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