|
SCIENTISTS looking for ways to help blind people get more
out of computers have developed a mouse that goes bump and
combined it with sound representations of graphs that would
otherwise be inaccessible.
Mike Burton of Glasgow University told reporters at the
British Association for the Advancement of Science annual
festival the mouse vibrated every time it met a line on a
graph, giving a blind operator a tactile tip-off.
“The technique is a very good way of presenting
information to blind and sighted people,” he said. “The bottom
line is that the cheapest and most flexible solution works.”
Likening the jumping mouse to electronic Braille, Burton
said one of the most daunting tasks facing visually impaired
people was trying to assimilate information giving an overview
of data or events.
Reinforcing the tactile jolt of the mouse, fellow Glasgow
University scientist Stephen Brewster said his team had
developed sound graphs that could be combined with the mouse.
Lines on a graph were represented by tones that would
vary in pitch according to whether the line was rising or
falling.
Several such tones could be used to represent different
lines of the same graph as the user entered a “soundscape.”
“You can get across quite complex information just using
sound,” he said, adding that the technique could even be of
use to sighted people such as share traders who could be
alerted on their mobile phones by a tone representing a move
up or down.
(SD-Agencies)
|