Pedestrian Detection with Wearable Cameras for the Blind: A Two-way Perspective.

Kyungjun Lee, Daisuke Sato, Saki Asakawa, Hernisa Kacorri, Chieko Asakawa
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Blind people have limited access to information about their surroundings, which is important for ensuring one's safety, managing social interactions, and identifying approaching pedestrians. With advances in computer vision, wearable cameras can provide equitable access to such information. However, the always-on nature of these assistive technologies poses privacy concerns for parties that may get recorded. We explore this tension from both perspectives, those of sighted passersby and blind users, taking into account camera visibility, in-person versus remote experience, and extracted visual information. We conduct two studies: an online survey with MTurkers (N=206) and an in-person experience study between pairs of blind (N=10) and sighted (N=40) participants, where blind participants wear a working prototype for pedestrian detection and pass by sighted participants. Our results suggest that both of the perspectives of users and bystanders and the several factors mentioned above need to be carefully considered to mitigate potential social tensions.

利用盲人可穿戴摄像头检测行人:双向视角。
盲人获取周围环境信息的途径有限,而这些信息对于确保自身安全、管理社会交往和识别接近的行人非常重要。随着计算机视觉技术的进步,可穿戴摄像头可以为盲人提供获取此类信息的平等机会。然而,这些辅助技术始终在线的特性给可能被记录的各方带来了隐私问题。我们从视力正常的路人和盲人用户两个角度探讨了这一矛盾,同时考虑到了摄像头的可视性、亲身体验与远程体验以及提取的视觉信息。我们进行了两项研究:一项是对 MTurkers(206 人)的在线调查,另一项是对盲人(10 人)和视力正常者(40 人)的亲身体验研究。我们的研究结果表明,用户和旁观者的视角以及上述几个因素都需要仔细考虑,以缓解潜在的社会紧张关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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