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Self-reported use of technology by orientation and mobility clients in Australia and Malaysia before the COVID-19 pandemic

Authors :
Abdullah Al Mahmud
Chris McCarthy
Jahar Lal Bhowmik
Lil Deverell
Denny Meyer
Bee Theng Lau
Fakir M. Amirul Islam
Suku Sukunesan
Source :
The British Journal of Visual Impairment
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2021.

Abstract

Since the 1960s, many electronic travel aids have been developed for people with low vision or blindness to improve their independent travel skills, but uptake of these specialist devices has been limited. This study investigated what technologies orientation and mobility (O&M) clients in Australia and Malaysia have, use, like, and want to support their travel, to inform technology research and development. This two-phase mixed-methods study surveyed O&M clients face-to-face in Malaysia ( n = 9), and online in Australia ( n = 50). Participants managed safe walking using a human guide, long cane, or guide dog when their vision was insufficient to see hazards, but a smartphone is now a standard travel aid in both Australia and Malaysia. Participants relied on smartphone accessibility features and identified 108 apps they used for travel: for planning (e.g., public transport timetables), sourcing information in transit (e.g., GPS location and directions, finding a taxi), sensory conversion (e.g., camera-to-voice, voice-to-text, video-to-live description), social connections (e.g., phone, email, Facebook), food (e.g., finding eateries, ordering online), and entertainment (e.g., music, games). They wanted to ‘carry less junk’, and sought better accessibility features, consistency across platforms, and fast, reliable, real-time information that supports confident, non-visual travel, especially into unfamiliar places.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17445809 and 02646196
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The British Journal of Visual Impairment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....63ec200ef4c007f56ebce781426fadae