[accessibleimage] Researchers Develop Adaptive Technology for Visually Impaired Engineers
- From: Lisa Yayla <fnugg@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: accessibleimage@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Sun, 14 Oct 2007 09:03:25 +0200
*Researchers Develop Adaptive Technology for Visually Impaired Engineers*
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - By adding features to commonly used
chemical-engineering software packages, researchers at the University of
Arkansas, the University of Akron and Chemstations Inc. have developed
adaptive technology that allows blind or visually impaired students and
working professionals to perform the essential functions of
chemical-engineering process design.
Led by Bob Beitle, professor of chemical engineering in the College of
Engineering at the University of Arkansas, the research team created a
system that combines tactile, Braille-like representations that can be
"read" by visually impaired chemical engineers. The system also includes
an audio, screen-reading component and audible indicators of certain
software functions. Researchers have also overcome a major obstacle
associated with the user function of dragging and dropping or copying
and pasting. A tablet computer with a customized overlay, a tablet pen
functioning as a computer mouse, and alignment holes mapped to the
tactile objects help facilitate the drag-and-drop function, which is the
method that connects unit operations.
"We are far enough into this project for me say that we have
significantly minimized the differences between visually impaired and
sighted engineers who do process design," Beitle said. "While we haven't
eliminated all differences, we have reached a point where a blind
chemical engineer can conduct himself as any engineer by manipulating
process-engineering software to achieve improvements or investigate
alternatives."
The system has been extensively tested at a process-engineering firm by
Noel Romey, a graduate student in the Ralph E. Martin Department of
Chemical Engineering. Romey, who has been blind since birth, came to the
university to study chemical engineering. Since May, he has tested the
system by simulating and designing various chemical facilities. The
extensive designs are used by clients of the design firm to improve
manufacturing systems.
The teaching and practice of chemical-engineering design traditionally
has had a strong visual component due to many visual tools that describe
concepts and processes. This reality, combined with the fact that
industry-specific software does not include any adaptive-technology
features, means that professors and engineering professionals have
little experience with visually impaired students, which may contribute
to blind and visually impaired students avoiding the profession.
Beitle's team converted GUIs into TUIs. GUI stands for graphical user
interface, which describes software that relies heavily on icons and
visual tools to represent concepts, functions and processes. Of course,
behind any GUI are codes programmed to execute various user commands,
such as opening programs or dragging documents. To accommodate those who
can't rely on visual cues, the researchers had to alter this visually
dependent system into something that could be felt - a tactile user
interface. Their system includes a TabletPC or CintiQ - personal
computers/screens that simulate notepads - and a pen-based mouse. Most
importantly, the system uses custom-made tactiles - small objects
embossed with patterns that represent various GUI icons that symbolize
parts, such as valves, pumps and reactors - and an overlay that is
placed on the screen. The tactiles adhere to the overlay. Alignment
holes on the tactiles allow users to place them at desired locations on
the overlay and thus build process-flow diagrams. Tactile and graphical
interfaces are the same size because when a tactile is clicked, the
design is built on the computer screen under it.
In addition to the computer modifications, the research project has an
equally important psychological component, one that Beitle thinks will
help both sighted and visually impaired engineers. Whether in the
classroom or at an engineering firm, engineers must work as a team on
design projects. This reality made Beitle think about the importance of
language and the verbal exchange of information between blind and
sighted professionals. How can design team members convey technical
information when a visual diagram cannot be relied upon?
To answer this question, Beitle and his design students collaborated
with Douglas Behrend, professor and chair of the psychology department
in the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences, and Rachel
Schwartz, a psychology graduate student. Led by Schwartz and Behrend,
who is an expert in cognitive and language development, the researchers
studied individuals with different communication styles and measured the
reliance on vague language, visual cues and gestures. When working with
Romey, sighted students seemed to modify patterns of communication
styles in ways that suggested they were considering the dynamics of
working with a visually impaired colleague. Behrend said this may be
explained by group members using metacognition, which psychologists
broadly refer to as individuals' knowledge of and about their own and
others' cognitive processes.
"This added dimension of this project will prepare sighted members of a
design team to communicate effectively in a technical fashion with less
reliance on visual cues," Beitle said.
http://dailyheadlines.uark.edu/11589.htm
*Contact:*
Bob Beitle, professor of chemical engineering, Louis Owen Professor of
Green Chemical Process Design and Development, Ralph E. Martin
department of chemical engineering
College of Engineering
(479) 575-7566, rbeitle@xxxxxxxx <mailto:rbeitle@xxxxxxxx>
Douglas Behrend, professor and chair, department of psychology
J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences
(479) 575-4256, dbehrend@xxxxxxxx <mailto:dbehrend@xxxxxxxx>
Matt McGowan, science and research communications officer
University Relations
(479) 575-4246, dmcgowa@xxxxxxxx <mailto:dmcgowa@xxxxxxxx>
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