2012
Kirner, Claudio; Cerqueira, Christopher Shneider; Kirner, Tereza Gonçalves
Dynamic spatial positioning system based on sounds and augmented reality for visually impaired people Proceedings Article
In: International Conference on Disability, Virtual Reality and Associated Technologies, 9., Laval, 2012, ISBN: 978-0-7049-1545-9.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Augmented Reality, Disability
@inproceedings{nokey,
title = {Dynamic spatial positioning system based on sounds and augmented reality for visually impaired people},
author = {Claudio Kirner and Christopher Shneider Cerqueira and Tereza Gonçalves Kirner},
url = {http://cscerqueira.com.br/a03_icdvrat2012_pong/},
isbn = {978-0-7049-1545-9},
year = {2012},
date = {2012-09-10},
urldate = {2012-09-10},
booktitle = {International Conference on Disability, Virtual Reality and Associated Technologies, 9.},
address = {Laval},
abstract = {This paper presents an application which intends to exercise spatial association of a three dimensional stimulus with its corresponding motor feedback, inspired on the Ping Pong Game. The application uses a low cost and easily built artifact, enhanced with an augmented reality layer provided by a free authoring tool. The augmented reality resources empower the artifact with sound feedback, so visually impaired people can use it. Besides, the visual feedback can be useful for non-visually impaired people and also for therapists, who can prepare exercises, promoting a therapeutic application and involving social inclusion capabilities.
},
keywords = {Augmented Reality, Disability},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
This paper presents an application which intends to exercise spatial association of a three dimensional stimulus with its corresponding motor feedback, inspired on the Ping Pong Game. The application uses a low cost and easily built artifact, enhanced with an augmented reality layer provided by a free authoring tool. The augmented reality resources empower the artifact with sound feedback, so visually impaired people can use it. Besides, the visual feedback can be useful for non-visually impaired people and also for therapists, who can prepare exercises, promoting a therapeutic application and involving social inclusion capabilities.