Fw: BlindNews: Researcher develops computer game for the blind
- From: "Vy Pham" <thaovyngu@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: <smcc@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 16 Jun 2005 14:44:10 -0400
----- Original Message -----
From: "Leon Gilbert" <BlindNews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Blind News Mailing List" <BlindNews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, June 14, 2005 9:22 PM
Subject: BlindNews: Researcher develops computer game for the blind
> PC World Magazine, Australia
> Tuesday, June 14, 2005
>
> Researcher develops computer game for the blind
>
> By Martyn Williams, IDG News Service
>
> A Japanese researcher has developed a computer game in which the player
becomes the game character, the game is played in real space and a pair of
headphones substitute for a monitor.
>
> The game is called BBBeat and requires the player to wield a mallet and
hit computer-generated bees in order to rack up points. The game has no
screen. Instead, the player wears special headphones that makes the bees
seem to buzz around the head, and the gamer must locate them based on sound
alone.
>
> The game, developed by Makoto Ohuchi of Tohoku Fukushi University as part
of his PhD project, is intended mostly as a training aid to heighten the
ability of the visually impaired to locate the source of sounds. But it can
be enjoyed by anybody, as Ohuchi showed during a demonstration Friday at the
university, about 400 kilometers north of Tokyo in the city of Sendai.
>
> Playing the game means first getting kitted out. The computer needs to be
able to follow the player's movements, so sensors are clipped to the
player's upper arm and wrist, and also to the headphones and the mallet. The
sensors communicate with a control box worn around the waist, which in turn
routes the information to a Windows PC.
>
> There is a monitor showing the bees and the movements of the player, but
it is meant for people accompanying the player rather than the player
himself.
>
> The game not only helps players practice locating sounds but also hones
their ability to reach out to the source of a sound -- and in this case bash
it with a mallet.
>
> Preliminary tests suggest the game may be effective. Ohuchi tested it by
giving 10 players a similar game to play for 10 days. Their ability to
locate the source of sounds was measured at the start and finish of the
10-day period. Those who had played the game showed significant improvement,
while a control group with no access to the game registered virtually no
change, Ohuchi wrote in a paper on the project.
>
> Further tests are needed to verify the preliminary findings, Ohuchi
cautioned.
>
> Plans to commercialize the game are advancing and Ohuchi hopes it will be
available before the end of the year.
>
> A consortium of four companies has been working with Ohuchi on the project
for the last two years, said Keiki Hatakeyama president of P Softhouse, a
Sendai-based software company that is one of the four. Tsuken Denki Kogyo,
another Sendai-based consortium member, will handle sales of the product,
Hatakeyama said.
>
> The price for the game has not yet been decided, but it will not be cheap,
Hatakeyama said.
>
> Ohuchi estimated that it will likely cost several thousand dollars. It
will be targeted at schools and rehabilitation centers for the blind, he
said.
>
> Details of Ohuchi's research are due to be published in the proceedings of
the International Conference on Auditory Display, which is scheduled to take
place from July 6 though July 9 in Limerick, Ireland.
>
> http://www.pcworld.idg.com.au/index.php/id;345629850;fp;2;fpid;1
>
>
> --
> BlindNews mailing list
>
> Archived at: http://GeoffAndWen.com/blind/
>
> Address message to list by sending mail to: BlindNews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
> Access your subscription info at:
http://blindprogramming.com/mailman/listinfo/blindnews_blindprogramming.com
>
> To unsubscribe via e-mail: send a message to
BlindNews-Request@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx with the word unsubscribe in either
the subject or body of the message
>
> __________ NOD32 1.1142 (20050616) Information __________
>
> This message was checked by NOD32 antivirus system.
> http://www.eset.com
>
>
------------------------------------------------
- To post messages on SMCC mailing list, simply send email to
smcc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- You can subscribe to SMCC mailing list by sending email to
smcc-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
with 'subscribe' in the Subject field with your subscriber list.
- You can unsubscribe from SMCC mailing list by sending email to
smcc-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
with 'unsubscribe' in the Subject field
This list is managed by Dang Hoai Phuc
Please click this link
http://dhp.p9.org.uk
to visit his own website!
Other related posts:
- » Fw: BlindNews: Researcher develops computer game for the blind