为大学大楼内视障人士设计的智能手机IMU室内导航系统

Jesus Zegarra Flores, L. Rasseneur, R. Galani, Fabienne Rakitic, R. Farcy
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引用次数: 11

摘要

本文的目的是为视障人士在GPS、蓝牙或Wi-Fi信号不可用的情况下设计和测试有效的室内导航解决方案。作者使用了智能手机的惯性测量单元(IMU)、指南针和气压计。设计/方法/方法作者使用带有IMU、指南针和气压计的商用Android智能手机来记录路径,并使用特定于移动的词汇表以适应的方式给出导航指令。提出的方法是考虑到不同的室内路径点,如楼梯(从一层到另一层的变化)和路径轨迹方向的变化(例如四分之一向右或向左)来保存路径,记录来自IMU传感器的数据,指南针和智能手机的气压计。有了这些信息和每段路径的特征(距离、向北的方位角和压力),就有可能为视障人士提供功能性的导航指导。三名不同的视障人士(一名部分失明,两名完全失明)和三名视力正常的人测试了这些道路。通过盲人和正常人的比较,从距离和时间两方面分析了导航的效率。主要的发现是,在一定的条件下,仅使用智能手机的传感器就可以引导视障人士数百米的距离:视障人士必须理解引导说明,并尊重一些策略(例如,不要在广阔的空间中斜着走)。此外,视障参与者步行距离与最优值相差不大。另一方面;由于他们在使用白手杖寻找免费路径时的犹豫,在某些情况下,他们需要多花50%的时间才能到达(对于几分钟的路径,这时间并不重要,甚至比寻找向导更有效)。需要强调的一点是,即使有这种犹豫,受试者还是到达了最终目的地。原创性/价值本文演示了IMU如何与使用口语移动语言的智能手机上的指南针和气压计耦合(例如,左边的下一个走廊;在楼梯尽头右转、左转等)可以引导视障人士进入建筑物。
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Indoor navigation with smart phone IMU for the visually impaired in university buildings
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to design and test effective indoor navigation solutions for visually impaired people in situations where GPS, bluetooth or Wi-Fi signals are unavailable. The authors use the inertial measurement units (IMU), the compass and the barometer of a smart phone. Design/methodology/approach The authors have used commercial Android smart phones with IMU, compass and barometer to record a path and to give navigation instructions in an adapted way using a mobility-specific vocabulary. The method proposed is to save paths taking into account different indoor waypoints such as the stairs (change from one floor to another) and the change of direction of the trajectory of the path (e.g. one-fourth turn right or left), recording data from the IMU sensor’s, compass and barometer of the smart phone. Having this information and the characteristics of the each segment (distance, azimuth to the north and pressure) of the path, it is possible to provide functional navigation guidance to the visually impaired subject. Three different visually impaired people (one partially sighted and two fully blind) and three sighted people have tested the paths. The efficiency of the navigation is analyzed in terms of distance and time using the comparison between blind and sighted people. Findings The main finding is that it is possible to guide visually impaired people some hundreds of meters just using the sensors of a smart phone under certain conditions: the visually impaired person has to understand the guidance instructions and respect some strategies (e.g. not to walk diagonally across vast spaces). Additionally it is observed that the visually impaired participants walked distances, which are not much different to the optimal values. On the other hand; because of their hesitations using their white cane to find free paths, they take in some cases 50 percent more time to arrive (for a few minutes path, this time is not critical and even more efficient than looking for a guide). One thing to highlight is that even with this hesitation, the subjects arrived to the final destination. Originality/value This paper demonstrates how an IMU coupled to a compass and a barometer from a Smart Phone employing a spoken mobility language (e.g. next corridor to the left; at the end of the stairs turn right, turn left, etc.) can guide visually impaired people inside buildings.
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