| Towards identifying distinguishable tactons for use with mobile devices |
| Full text |
Pdf
(460 KB)
|
Source
|
ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility
archive
Proceedings of the 11th international ACM SIGACCESS conference on Computers and accessibility
table of contents
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
POSTER SESSION: Posters and system demonstrations
table of contents
Pages 257-258
Year of Publication: 2009
ISBN:978-1-60558-558-1
|
|
Authors
|
|
| Sponsor |
|
| Publisher |
|
| Bibliometrics |
Downloads (6 Weeks): 12, Downloads (12 Months): 12, Citation Count: 0
|
|
|
ABSTRACT
This paper describes a study designed to identify salient tactile cues which can be integrated with a cellular telephone interface, to provide non-visual feedback to users when accessing mobile applications. A set of tactile icons (tactons) have been developed by manipulating the pulse duration and interval of vibrotactile signals. Participants were presented with pairs of tactons, and asked to differentiate between each respective pair and rank their salience. Results suggested that the combination of two static tactons is the most effective way to convey tactile information, when compared with dynamic or mixed tactile cues. Further studies will be conducted to refine feedback in order to communicate the presence of graphical objects on a mobile device interface, or to present events and alerts more effectively. The long term goal is to improve access to an interface by using the tactile channel, thereby freeing the visual and auditory channels to perform other tasks.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
| |
1
|
Brewster, S. & Brown, L. M. Tactons: structured tactile messages for non-visual information display. AUIC '04, Australian Computer Society, Inc., 2004, 15--23.
|
| |
2
|
Kyung, Ki-Uk and Lee, Jun-Young. wUbi-Pen: windows graphical user interface interacting with haptic feedback stylus. SIGGRAPH '08 new tech demos. ACM, 2008, 1--4
|
| |
3
|
McDaniel, T.L., Krishna, S., Colbry, D. & Panchanathan, S. Using tactile rhythm to convey interpersonal distances to individuals who are blind. CHI EA '09, ACM, 2009, 4669--4674.
|
| |
4
|
Brown, L. M.; Brewster, S. A. & Purchase, H. C. Multi-dimensional tactons for non-visual information presentation in mobile devices. MobileHCI '06, ACM, 2006, 231--238.
|
| |
5
|
Brown, L. M.; Brewster, S. A. & Purchase, H. C. Tactile crescendos and sforzandos: applying musical techniques to tactile icon design. CHI '06, ACM, 2006, 610--615.
|
| |
6
|
Shieh, M.-D. & Wu, Z.-B. Tactile Icon Design Using a Vibration Actuator in Mobile Devices. APCHI '08, Springer-Verlag, 2008, 240--247.
|
| |
7
|
Ternes, David and Maclean, Karon E., Designing Large Sets of Haptic Icons with Rhythm. EuroHaptics '08, Springer-Verlag, 2008, 199--208.
|
| |
8
|
Brown, L. M. & Kaaresoja, T. Feel who's talking: using tactons for mobile phone alerts. CHI '06, ACM, 2006, 604--609.
|
INDEX TERMS
Primary Classification:
C.
Computer Systems Organization
C.5
COMPUTER SYSTEM IMPLEMENTATION
C.5.3
Microcomputers
Subjects:
Portable devices (e.g., laptops, personal digital assistants)
Additional Classification:
H.
Information Systems
H.5
INFORMATION INTERFACES AND PRESENTATION (I.7)
H.5.2
User Interfaces (D.2.2, H.1.2, I.3.6)
Subjects:
Haptic I/O
General Terms:
Design,
Experimentation,
Human Factors,
Performance
Keywords:
mobile and wearable devices,
non-visual interaction,
tactile sense,
usability,
vibration pattern
|