Projects details

  • VIP-ACCESS - Ubiquitous Web Access for Visually Impaired People (Acesso Ubíquo à WEB para cegos)
  • May 2008 - Apr 2011
  • Visually impaired people are info-excluded due to the overwhelming task they face to read information on the web. Indeed, unlike fully capacitated people, blind people can not read information by just scanning it quickly i.e. they can not read in the “diagonal”. As a consequence, they have to come through all sentences of web pages to understand if a document is interesting or not. This is obviously an overwhelming task which clearly excludes visually impaired people to quick access to information. Although a lot has been done for blind people to access information with braille screens, braille keyboards, braille PDAs andText-to-Speech interfaces, very little has been made to reduce the amount of information they have to deal with. Today, this is one of the most important challenge of our society to deal with the info-inclusion of visually impaired people. Indeed, do you really need to read a 20 pages document to know if it is interesting for you? Of course not. But blind people need to do this. So, we clearly need to solve this problem which deeply limits web information access. Another important factor is that most blind people do not have access to expensive adapted devices (mentioned above). This fact can be seen as a society-exclusion problem. Indeed, only a small proportion of visually impaired people have access to information. For that purpose, we aim at proposing new human-computer interfaces that run on classical devices such as classical PCs, Pocket PCs or PDAs. As a consequence, blind people may have access to affordable technology. In particular, we aim at developing a wide range of technological solutions so that visually impaired people can take advantage of the new ubiquitous technologies that are fast growing in our every day lives. This project aims at tackling this challenging task by introducing on-line services to existing search engines. Indeed, the most efficient way to access to information is search engines. As a consequence, our focus will be to provide solutions via a meta search engine which will include the following tasks: (1) Automatic Clustering of Web Page Results, (2) Accurate Synthetic Automatic Description of Documents, (3) Automatic Summarization of Web Pages, (4) Automatic Description of Images based on Text and Image features, (5) Speech-to-Speech Interfaces. One of the particularity of these processes is that they are computationally heavy which contrasts with the dynamicity of the web which demands quick answers from the systems. As a consequence, efficient algorithmic solutions will have to be designed to answer in real-time to information access. This can be seen as tackling the following tasks: (6) Implementation of Efficient Text Algorithms, (7) Design of Distributed and Parallel Architectures. Duration: 2008-2010 Leader: Gaël Harry Dias External Participants: Pavel Brazdil (Univeristy of Porto, Portugal), José Gabriel Pereira Lopes (New University of Lisbon, Portugal), Hugo Liu (MIT, USA), Rada Mihalcea (North Texas University, USA). Funding Agency: Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portugal) Reference: PTDC/PLP/72142/2006 Visually impaired people are info-excluded due to the overwhelming task they face to read information on the web. Indeed, unlike fully capacitated people, blind people can not read information by just scanning it quickly i.e. they can not read in the "diagonal". As a consequence, they have to come through all sentences of web pages to understand if a document is interesting or not. This is obviously an overwhelming task which clearly excludes visually impaired people to quick access to information. Although a lot has been done for blind people to access information with braille screens, braille keyboards, braille PDAs andText-to-Speech interfaces, very little has been made to reduce the amount of information they have to deal with. Today, this is one of the most important challenge of our society to deal with the info-inclusion of visually impaired people. Indeed, do you really need to read a 20 pages document to know if it is interesting for you? Of course not. But blind people need to do this. So, we clearly need to solve this problem which deeply limits web information access. Another important factor is that most blind people do not have access to expensive adapted devices (mentioned above). This fact can be seen as a society-exclusion problem. Indeed, only a small proportion of visually impaired people have access to information. For that purpose, we aim at proposing new human-computer interfaces that run on classical devices such as classical PCs, Pocket PCs or PDAs. As a consequence, blind people may have access to affordable technology. In particular, we aim at developing a wide range of technological solutions so that visually impaired people can take advantage of the new ubiquitous technologies that are fast growing in our every day lives. This project aims at tackling this challenging task by introducing on-line services to existing search engines. Indeed, the most efficient way to access to information is search engines. As a consequence, our focus will be to provide solutions via a meta search engine which will include the following tasks: (1) Automatic Clustering of Web Page results, (2) Accurate Synthetic Automatic Description of Documents, (3) Automatic Summarization of Web Pages, (4) Automatic Description of Images based on Text and Image features, (5) Speech-to-Speech Interfaces. One of the particularity of these processes is that they are computationally heavy which contrasts with the dynamicity of the web which demands quick answers from the systems. As a consequence, efficient algorithmic solutions will have to be designed to answer in real-time to information access. This can be seen as tackling the following tasks: (6) Implementation of Efficient Text Algorithms, (7) Design of Distributed and Parallel Architectures. We want to stress that this project aims at providing the blind community with a prototype that may lead to a final patented product. As a consequence, the overall architecture will be developed and evaluated in association with the ACAPO (Associação dos Cegos e Amblíopes de Portugal (http://www.acapo.pt) association for visually impaired people.
  • PN
  • Universidade da Beira Interior
  • FCT-MCTES - Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (MEC)
  • 124
  • 20
  • 1 May 2008
  • 30 Apr 2011
  • Joaquim Ferreira da Silva [Researcher], Gabriel Pereira Lopes [Coordinator]
  • Universidade da Beira Interior
  • Fundação Gomes Teixeira, Universidade do Porto
  • Messachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
  • University of North Texas