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RecruitingNCT06237829

Testing Tactile Aids With Blind Subjects

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
100 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Delaware · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
16 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The objective of this project is to create richer tactile aids by using materials chemistry to create tactile sensations in tactile aids, as an alternative to traditional physical bumps, lines, or textures. These materials are commonly used in household products, but have not yet been used to enrich tactile aids. Successful outcomes are primarily the accuracy with which low vision or blind subjects identify objects made from tactile coatings versus traditional tactile aids. Other outcomes include time to completion of the task, or the number of distinctive categories that participants can identify.

Detailed description

Traditional images and graphics, like mathematical plots or charts, are not accessible to low vision and blind people. Instead, for blind and low vision people, tactile aids are traditionally used to convey abstract concepts. However, tactile aids cannot convey as rich or as dense of information as traditional visual graphics, limiting independence and access to gainful employment for low vision and blind professionals. The primary reason why tactile aids are inferior to visual graphics is that tactile aids are made from a combination of physical bumps, lines, and labels. Placing too many details on a single tactile aid quickly becomes illegible to the user because the various bumps, lines, and textures blur together, which is known as "tactile clutter". The objective of this project is to create richer tactile aids by using materials chemistry to create tactile sensations in tactile aids, as an alternative to traditional physical bumps, lines, or textures. These materials are commonly used in household products, but have not yet been used to enrich tactile aids. Successful outcomes include having low vision or blind subjects identify objects made from our tactile materials quicker than traditional tactile aids, or to successfully identify more categories on a mathematical plot than is currently possible with existing tactile aids.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALSingle bump acuityInvestigators will design bumps of varying heights, spacings, diameters, and bump shapes (rounded top, flat top, angled top) which give a precise amount of mechanical stimulus to the finger. Subjects will be asked if they could notice a bump on the surface and instructed to make the judgment quickly (\<2 seconds). A psychometric curve, with a standard braille bump serving as the positive, \~100% success rate control, will be constructed
BEHAVIORALOptimal spacing between bumpsInvestigators will fabricate and characterize two bumps of varying widths (ranging from 150 μm to 3 times the bump width, based on fabrication resolution available in commercial tactile aid machines). Subjects will be asked to run their finger across the two bumps (two bumps always form a line, so investigators do not need to ask subjects to orient their fingers) quickly and asked if they felt one bump or two.
BEHAVIORALImproving signal from a single bump with designer materialsInvestigators will coat single bumps with our designer materials (with alkyl and amino functional groups) to improve the mechanical stimuli from a single bump. Subjects will then be asked to perform a similar experiment as the "single bump acuity" test and the "optimal spacing between bumps" test. ("can you notice the bump?" or "did you feel one or two bumps").

Timeline

Start date
2021-09-01
Primary completion
2026-08-31
Completion
2027-12-01
First posted
2024-02-02
Last updated
2024-03-13

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06237829. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Testing Tactile Aids With Blind Subjects (NCT06237829) · Clinical Trials Directory