Proceedings of the 23rd International ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility 2021
DOI: 10.1145/3441852.3471232
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Accessing Passersby Proxemic Signals through a Head-Worn Camera: Opportunities and Limitations for the Blind

Abstract: Fig. 1. A pedestrian detection scenario demonstrating the data collection in our study. A blind person, wearing smart glasses with our working prototype, and a sighted person walk toward each other in a corridor. The smart glasses detect the sighted passerby, estimate his proximity, and share his relative location and head pose.The spatial behavior of passersby can be critical to blind individuals to initiate interactions, preserve personal space, or practice social distancing during a pandemic. Among other us… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Our analysis of video frames from Vizux Blade, which has a 64-degree horizontal field of view, indicates a higher percentage of visibility from the glasses for participants who became blind later in life compared to those who were born blind and tend to "turn their head to orient their ear towards a sound source" [31,33,51]. This observation provides additional evidence on prior work indicating how limited field of view in smart glasses for pedestrian detection can exclude blind users who could benefit the most from this technology [27]. While smart glasses with a wider camera angle could potentially help, they can also lead to image distortions [48].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 57%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Our analysis of video frames from Vizux Blade, which has a 64-degree horizontal field of view, indicates a higher percentage of visibility from the glasses for participants who became blind later in life compared to those who were born blind and tend to "turn their head to orient their ear towards a sound source" [31,33,51]. This observation provides additional evidence on prior work indicating how limited field of view in smart glasses for pedestrian detection can exclude blind users who could benefit the most from this technology [27]. While smart glasses with a wider camera angle could potentially help, they can also lead to image distortions [48].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 57%
“…We believe that cameras embedded in smart glasses can play a role in filling this gap as they can provide a mobile and first-person perspective, which may or may not capture both the interface and participant's interactions with it. To our knowledge, using smart glasses for this task has not been previously explored with blind participants, whose idiosyncratic head movements could potentially affect what is being captured by the camera [27].…”
Section: Remote User Studies In Accessibilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Another factor affecting acceptance of assistive technology, according to Lee et al (2020), is users’ perception of technological solutions, which, in turn, depends on whether users have direct or indirect experience with them. The present study highlights the significant positive effect of the former on users’ opinions about assistive technology.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%