Walking Assistant - A Mobile Aid for the Visually-Impaired

The most common navigation aid visually-impaired people employ is a white cane, but, recently, technology has given rise to a varied set of sophisticated navigation aids. While these new aids can provide more assistance to a visually-impaired person than a white cane, they tend to be expensive due t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Miller, Adin T
Format: Others
Published: DigitalCommons@CalPoly 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1262
https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2340&context=theses
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spelling ndltd-CALPOLY-oai-digitalcommons.calpoly.edu-theses-23402021-08-20T05:01:40Z Walking Assistant - A Mobile Aid for the Visually-Impaired Miller, Adin T The most common navigation aid visually-impaired people employ is a white cane, but, recently, technology has given rise to a varied set of sophisticated navigation aids. While these new aids can provide more assistance to a visually-impaired person than a white cane, they tend to be expensive due to a small market segment, which in turn can reduce their accessibility. In an effort to produce a technologically-advanced yet accessible navigation aid, an Android application is proposed that detects and notifies users about obstacles within their path through the use of a smartphone's camera. While the smartphone is mounted on a harness worn by the user, the Walking Assistant application operates by capturing images as the user walks, finding features of objects within each frame, and determining how the features have moved from image to image. If it is discovered that an object is moving towards the user, the Walking Assistant will activate the smartphone's vibration mode to alert the user to the object's presence. Additionally, the user can control the Walking Assistant through the use of either touch or voice commands. By conducting real-world tests, it was determined that the Walking Assistant can correctly identify obstacles 42.1% of the time, while generating false positive obstacle identifications only 15.0% of the time. The accuracy of the Walking Assistant can be further improved by implementing additional features, such as a fuzzy-decision-based thresholding system or image stabilization. 2014-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1262 https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2340&context=theses Master's Theses DigitalCommons@CalPoly computer vision smartphone application optical flow visually-impaired Computer Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic computer vision
smartphone application
optical flow
visually-impaired
Computer Sciences
spellingShingle computer vision
smartphone application
optical flow
visually-impaired
Computer Sciences
Miller, Adin T
Walking Assistant - A Mobile Aid for the Visually-Impaired
description The most common navigation aid visually-impaired people employ is a white cane, but, recently, technology has given rise to a varied set of sophisticated navigation aids. While these new aids can provide more assistance to a visually-impaired person than a white cane, they tend to be expensive due to a small market segment, which in turn can reduce their accessibility. In an effort to produce a technologically-advanced yet accessible navigation aid, an Android application is proposed that detects and notifies users about obstacles within their path through the use of a smartphone's camera. While the smartphone is mounted on a harness worn by the user, the Walking Assistant application operates by capturing images as the user walks, finding features of objects within each frame, and determining how the features have moved from image to image. If it is discovered that an object is moving towards the user, the Walking Assistant will activate the smartphone's vibration mode to alert the user to the object's presence. Additionally, the user can control the Walking Assistant through the use of either touch or voice commands. By conducting real-world tests, it was determined that the Walking Assistant can correctly identify obstacles 42.1% of the time, while generating false positive obstacle identifications only 15.0% of the time. The accuracy of the Walking Assistant can be further improved by implementing additional features, such as a fuzzy-decision-based thresholding system or image stabilization.
author Miller, Adin T
author_facet Miller, Adin T
author_sort Miller, Adin T
title Walking Assistant - A Mobile Aid for the Visually-Impaired
title_short Walking Assistant - A Mobile Aid for the Visually-Impaired
title_full Walking Assistant - A Mobile Aid for the Visually-Impaired
title_fullStr Walking Assistant - A Mobile Aid for the Visually-Impaired
title_full_unstemmed Walking Assistant - A Mobile Aid for the Visually-Impaired
title_sort walking assistant - a mobile aid for the visually-impaired
publisher DigitalCommons@CalPoly
publishDate 2014
url https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1262
https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2340&context=theses
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