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Tactile colour pictogram to improve artwork appreciation of people with visual impairments

Title
Tactile colour pictogram to improve artwork appreciation of people with visual impairments
Authors
Cho, Jun DongQuero, Luis CavazosBartolome, Jorge IranzoLee, Do WonOh, UranLee, Inae
Ewha Authors
오유란
SCOPUS Author ID
오유란scopus
Issue Date
2021
Journal Title
COLOR RESEARCH AND APPLICATION
ISSN
0361-2317JCR Link

1520-6378JCR Link
Citation
COLOR RESEARCH AND APPLICATION vol. 46, no. 1, pp. 103 - 116
Keywords
user experiencevisually impairedtactile colour patternpictogramaccessibilityart appreciation
Publisher
WILEY
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
A recent development in tactile technology enables an improvement in the appreciation of the visual arts for people with visual impairment (PVI). The tactile sense, in conjunction with, or a possibly as an alternative to, the auditory sense, would allow PVIs to approach artwork in a more self-driven and engaging way that would be difficult to achieve with just an auditory stimulus. Tactile colour pictograms (TCPs), which are raised geometric patterns, are ideographic characters that are designed to enable PVIs to identify colours and interpret information by touch. In this article, three TCPs are introduced to code colours in the Munsell colour system. Each colour pattern consists of a basic cell size of 10 mm x 10 mm to represent the patterns consistently in terms of regular shape. Each TCP consists of basic geometric patterns that are combined to create primary, secondary, and tertiary colour pictograms of shapes indicating colour hue, intensity and lightness. Each TCP represents 29 colours including six hues; they were then further expanded to represent 53 colours. Two of them did not increase the cell size, the other increased the cell size 1.5 times for some colours, such as yellow-orange, yellow, blue, and blue-purple. Our proposed TCPs use a slightly larger cell size compared to most tactile patterns currently used to indicate colour, but code for more colours. With user experience and identification tests, conducted with 23 visually impaired adults, the effectiveness of the TCPs suggests that they were helpful for the participants.
DOI
10.1002/col.22567
Appears in Collections:
인공지능대학 > 컴퓨터공학과 > Journal papers
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