手指追踪:促进移动电子阅读应用程序的非商业内容生产

Carrie Demmans Epp, Cosmin Munteanu, Benett Axtell, Keerthika Ravinthiran, Yomna Aly, Elman Mansimov
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引用次数: 6

摘要

有限的读写能力和视力障碍降低了许多人独立阅读的能力。目前的电子阅读器解决方案要么依赖于不自然的合成声音,要么依赖于专业制作的电子书音频。两者都不能提供与家庭成员为用户朗读相同的乐趣,特别是当用户需要辅助阅读时(在听阅读时跟随打印文本)。不幸的是,对这种非商业生产的电子书的支持是有限的,需要付出巨大的努力。我们评估了一种新颖的、辅助的移动交互技术,该技术促进了有声电子书的记录及其与阅读文本的同步。我们展示了一种基于手指跟踪隐喻的技术,在阅读速度方面提供了最佳支持。这些人在循环中,自适应的技术现在可以用来减少与支持那些不能自己阅读的人相关的内容创建负担。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Finger tracking: facilitating non-commercial content production for mobile e-reading applications
Limited literacy and visual impairment reduce the ability of many to read on their own. Current e-reader solutions rely on either unnatural synthetic voices or professionally produced audio e-books. Neither provide the same enjoyment as having a family member read to a user, especially when the user requires assistive reading (following printed text while listening to it being read). Unfortunately, the support for non-commercial production of such e-books is limited and requires significant effort. We evaluate a novel, assistive mobile interaction technique that facilitates the recording of audio e-books and their synchronization with the read text. We show that a technique based on a finger tracking metaphor provides optimal support with respect to reading speed. These human-in-the-loop, adaptive techniques can now be used to reduce the content-creation burden that is associated with supporting those who cannot read on their own.
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