[accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- From: Peter Meijer <blindfold@xxxxxxxxxx>
- To: accessibleimage@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Wed, 27 Jun 2007 20:45:40 +0200
Hi John and Nayab,
I have not used IVEO, but yes, I agree with John that a combination
of auditory and tactile feedback could be nicely complementary.
Best regards,
Peter Meijer
Seeing with Sound - The vOICe
http://www.seeingwithsound.com/winvoice.htm
John Gardner wrote:
Hello Nayab. The IVEO technology developed by ViewPlus and used with a
Tiger embosser has much of the functionality that you need. Ability to
identify color and other image attributes is the subject of an IVEO
expansion research and development project that is now underway, and it is
working beautifully in our research applications. The commercial version is
some way from introduction, but I'd be happy to work with you basically as a
participant in this development. I suggest you read over the info on IVEO
on the ViewPlus web site, and in particular read some of the research
articles linked from http://www.viewplus.com/abstracts/ to learn what IVEO
is and can do for you now. Then please write me, and we can discuss the
current research project and how it might help solve your problems.
Peter Meijer has also written about the innovative VOICe technology that he
has developed. I'd be interested to know whether VOICe could be used in
combination with IVEO for things like neuro-imaging. My guess is that IVEO
and VOICe would complement each other beautifully. And I'll bet that Peter
would be happy to help out. Maybe he'd like to comment.
John Gardner
- References:
Other related posts:
- » [accessibleimage] tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
- » [accessibleimage] Re: tactile and auditory representations of neuroimaging data
Hello Nayab. The IVEO technology developed by ViewPlus and used with a Tiger embosser has much of the functionality that you need. Ability to identify color and other image attributes is the subject of an IVEO expansion research and development project that is now underway, and it is working beautifully in our research applications. The commercial version is some way from introduction, but I'd be happy to work with you basically as a participant in this development. I suggest you read over the info on IVEO on the ViewPlus web site, and in particular read some of the research articles linked from http://www.viewplus.com/abstracts/ to learn what IVEO is and can do for you now. Then please write me, and we can discuss the current research project and how it might help solve your problems. Peter Meijer has also written about the innovative VOICe technology that he has developed. I'd be interested to know whether VOICe could be used in combination with IVEO for things like neuro-imaging. My guess is that IVEO and VOICe would complement each other beautifully. And I'll bet that Peter would be happy to help out. Maybe he'd like to comment. John Gardner