Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
skip to main content
10.1145/1385569.1385657acmconferencesArticle/Chapter ViewAbstractPublication PagesaviConference Proceedingsconference-collections
poster

Toward haptic mathematics: why and how

Published: 28 May 2008 Publication History

Abstract

Understanding a mathematical concept, expressed in a written form, requires the exploration of the whole symbolic expression to recognize its component significant patterns as well as its overall structure. This exploration is difficult for visually impaired people whether the symbolic expression is materialized as an oral description or a Braille expression. The paper introduces the notion of Haptic Mathematics as a digital medium of thought and communication of mathematical concepts that adopts the nomenclature and language of Mathematics and makes its expressions perceptible as sets of haptic signals. As a first step toward Haptic Mathematics, the paper presents a system adopting an audio-haptic interaction whose goal is to enable visual impaired or blind people to reason on graph structures and communicate their reasoning with sighted people. The paper describes a first system prototype and some preliminary usability results aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of the proposal.

References

[1]
Cajori, F. A History of Mathematical Notations, Volume If, Open Court Publishing Co., La Salle, Illinois, 1929.
[2]
Fogli, D., Marcante, A., Mussio, P., Parasiliti Provenza, L., and Piccinno, A. 2007. Multi-facet Design of Interactive System through Visual Languages, in F. Ferri (Ed.) "Visual Languages for Interactive Computing: Definitions and Formalizations", HERSHEY PA: IGI Global, 2007, 174--204.
[3]
Fritz, J. P., Way, T. P., and Barner, K. E. 1996. Haptic Representation of Scientific Data for Visually Impaired or Blind Persons. In Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Technology and Persons with Disabilities Conference, California State University, Northridge, LA, CA, 1996.
[4]
Iverson, K. E. 2007. Notation as a tool of thought. SIGAPL APL Quote Quad 35, 1--2 (Mar. 2007), 2--31.
[5]
Marcante, A., Mussio, P. 2006. Electronic Interactive Documents and Knowledge Enhancing: a Semiotic Approach, the Document Academy, October 13--15, 2006, UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA
[6]
McGookin, D. K., and Brewster, S. A. 2006. MultiVis: Improving Access to Visualisations for Visually Impaired People. In extended proceedings of CHI 2006 (Montreal, Canada), ACM Press.
[7]
Mcgookin, D. K. and Brewster, S. A. 2006. Graph builder: Constructing non-visual visualizations. In ICAD 2006 (London, UK).
[8]
Petrie, H., Schlieder, C., Blenkhorn, P., Evans, G., King, A., O'Neill, A.-M., Ioannidis, G. T., Gallagher, B., Crombie, D., Mager, R., and Alafaci, M. 2002. TeDUB: a system for presenting and exploring technical drawings for blind people. In K. Miesenberger, J. Klaus and W. Zagler (Eds.), LNCS 239. Heidelberg: Springer Verlag
[9]
Stevens, R. D. 1996. Principles for the Design of Auditory Interfaces to Present Complex Information to Blind People. PhD Thesis, Dept. of Computer Science, University of York.
[10]
Vanderheiden, G. C. 1989. Nonvisual alternative display techniques for output from graphics-based computers. Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness 83, 8, 383--390.
[11]
Yu, W., and Brewster, S. A. 2003. Evaluation of multimodal graphs for blind people. Universal Access in the Information Society, 2, 2, 105--124.

Cited By

View all
  • (2019)Multimodal Exploration of Mathematical Function Graphs with AudioFunctions.webProceedings of the 16th International Web for All Conference10.1145/3315002.3332438(1-2)Online publication date: 13-May-2019
  • (2017)On the Evaluation of Novel Sonification Techniques for Non-Visual Shape ExplorationACM Transactions on Accessible Computing10.1145/30467899:4(1-28)Online publication date: 4-Apr-2017

Index Terms

  1. Toward haptic mathematics: why and how

    Recommendations

    Comments

    Information & Contributors

    Information

    Published In

    cover image ACM Conferences
    AVI '08: Proceedings of the working conference on Advanced visual interfaces
    May 2008
    483 pages
    ISBN:9781605581415
    DOI:10.1145/1385569
    Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

    Sponsors

    Publisher

    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 28 May 2008

    Permissions

    Request permissions for this article.

    Check for updates

    Author Tags

    1. blind users
    2. haptic
    3. multimodal interactive systems

    Qualifiers

    • Poster

    Funding Sources

    • University of Milan
    • @Science consortium

    Conference

    AVI '08
    Sponsor:

    Acceptance Rates

    Overall Acceptance Rate 128 of 490 submissions, 26%

    Contributors

    Other Metrics

    Bibliometrics & Citations

    Bibliometrics

    Article Metrics

    • Downloads (Last 12 months)3
    • Downloads (Last 6 weeks)0
    Reflects downloads up to 12 Sep 2024

    Other Metrics

    Citations

    Cited By

    View all
    • (2019)Multimodal Exploration of Mathematical Function Graphs with AudioFunctions.webProceedings of the 16th International Web for All Conference10.1145/3315002.3332438(1-2)Online publication date: 13-May-2019
    • (2017)On the Evaluation of Novel Sonification Techniques for Non-Visual Shape ExplorationACM Transactions on Accessible Computing10.1145/30467899:4(1-28)Online publication date: 4-Apr-2017

    View Options

    Get Access

    Login options

    View options

    PDF

    View or Download as a PDF file.

    PDF

    eReader

    View online with eReader.

    eReader

    Media

    Figures

    Other

    Tables

    Share

    Share

    Share this Publication link

    Share on social media