COMPUTERS TO REDUCE GAP BETWEEN ABLE & DISABLED

Efforts are underway to come up with a more user friendly computer that 
responds to physically challenged individuals.  Current designs are 
particularly frustrating for the disabled, the elderly and anybody who had 
trouble with a mouse.  A new approach developed by Washington University 
researchers would put each person through a brief skills test and generate a 
mathematically based version of the user interface optimized for his or her 
vision and motor abilities.  Assistive technologies are built on  the 
assumption that it’s the people who have to adapt to the technology.  We tried 
to reverse this assumption, and make the software adapt to people, said the 
study’s co-author.  Tests showed the system closed the performance gap between 
disabled and able bodied users by 62 percent and disabled users strongly 
preferred the automatically generated inter faces.  This shows that 
automatically generating personalized interfaces really do work, and the 
technology is ready for prime time, the author said.  The system called supple 
begins with a one-time assessment of a person’s mouse pointing, dragging and 
clicking skills. A ring of dots appears on the screen and as each dot lights up 
the user must quickly click  on it.  The task is repeated with different  sized 
dots.  Other prompts ask the  participant to click and drag, select from a list 
and click  repeatedly on one spot.  Participants can move the cursor using any 
type of device.  The test takes about 20 minutes for an able bodied person or 
up to 90 minutes for a person with motor disabilities.

Researchers tested the system last summer on six able-bodied people and 11 
people with motor impairments.  The resulting interfaces showed one size 
definitely did not fit all.  A man with severe cerebral palsy used his chin to 
control a trackball and could move the pointer quickly but spastically.  Based 
on his skills test, supple generated a user interface where  all the targets 
were bigger than normal, and lists were expanded to minimize scrolling.,  In 
contrast, a woman with muscular dystrophy who participated in the study used 
both hands to move a mouse.  She could make very precise movements but moved 
the cursor very slowly and with great effort because of weak muscles.  Based on 
her results, supple automatically generated an interface with small buttons and 
a compressed layout.  


KODAKKAL SHIVAPRASAD,FUWAI
Award Winner & Record Holder-International Biographical Note,
URL:- http://kodakkal.ning.com/
http://kodakkalshivaprasad.blogspot.com
http://www.linkedin.com/in/kodakkalshivaprasad


Join Access India convention: For updates on it visit: 
http://accessindia.org.in/harish/convention.htm
Registration is now open!

To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
  http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in

Reply via email to