Although pointing or selecting may be impossible, performing a gesture is not. We present an approach similar to NavTap (NavTouch) that uses the user’s capacity to perform a directional gesture and through it navigate in the alphabet (similarly to the keypad based approach). Once again, the user is not forced to memorize or guess any location in the screen as the interaction is limited to directional strokes.
Special actions are linked to the screen corners as those are easily identified. After performing a gesture, if the user keeps pressing the screen, the navigation will continue automatically in last direction. The bottom right corner of the screen erases the last character entered and the bottom left corner of the screen enters a space or other special characters. In contrast to keypad, where the user has to find the right key to press, with these gestures that extra cognitive load does not exist.
NavTouch outperforms NavTap because of the additional effort in finding the appropriate directional key with NavTap. Indeed, we found that users are able to quickly navigate in all four directions with NavTouch as gestures can start at almost any point on the screen with no extra associated load. Furthermore, users are able to write sentences faster with navigational approaches, improving their performance across sessions. Overall, experimental results show that navigational approaches are far easier to learn and users are able to improve performance without further training. Moreover, NavTouch was more effective than NavTap because of the more fluid mapping of gestures to actions.
See the video of a blind user testing the system...
Credits:
Hugo Nicolau
Paulo LagoĆ”
Tiago Guerreiro
Joaquim Jorge
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