Adaptive Interface for Accommodating Colour-Blind Users by Using Ishihara Test

12/09/2017
by   Abu Zohran Qaiser, et al.
0

Imperative visual data frequently vanishes when color applications are seen by partially color blind users. A new method for adaptive interface for accommodating color blind users is presented. The method presented here has two sections: 1) test client perceivability by utilizing Ishihara plates. 2) change the interface color scheme to accommodate color blind users if necessary. We demonstrate how the method works via a simple interface and evaluate the efficiency of our method by experimenting it on 100 users.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

research
08/20/2019

StateLens: A Reverse Engineering Solution for Making Existing Dynamic Touchscreens Accessible

Blind people frequently encounter inaccessible dynamic touchscreens in t...
research
05/18/2009

A statistical learning approach to color demosaicing

A statistical learning/inference framework for color demosaicing is pres...
research
10/21/2022

Exploration of the Usage of Color Terms by Color-blind Participants in Online Discussion Platforms

Prominent questions about the role of sensory vs. linguistic input in th...
research
06/17/2009

Personal applications, based on moveable / resizable elements

All the modern day applications have the interface, absolutely defined b...
research
05/19/2022

IFTT-PIN: A PIN-Entry Method Leveraging the Self-Calibration Paradigm

IFTT-PIN is a self-calibrating version of the PIN-entry method introduce...
research
08/16/2022

Blind Users Accessing Their Training Images in Teachable Object Recognizers

Iteration of training and evaluating a machine learning model is an impo...
research
02/01/2021

Revamp: Enhancing Accessible Information Seeking Experience of Online Shopping for Blind or Low Vision Users

Online shopping has become a valuable modern convenience, but blind or l...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset