[Artbeyondsightmuseums] maps, wayfinding, British museum
Lisa Yayla
fnugg at online.no
Tue Dec 29 10:52:30 UTC 2009
links about maps at Perkins
http://www.perkins.org/resources/scout/geography/tactile-maps.html
BlindAid stylus
MIT’s Touch Lab has developed a device called the BlindAid system to
enable the visually impaired to feel their way around a virtual model of
a room or building. Mandayam Srinivasan, Director of the MIT Touch Lab
and affiliated with the Research Laboratory of Electronics and the
Department of Mechanical Engineering is working on this project with the
Carroll Center for the Blind in Newton Massachusetts.....
In the long term, he believes the device could be used to help blind
people not only preview public spaces but to also use the device to
travel by public transportation by using virtual route maps and then be
able to interact with the virtual map through touch.
http://telemedicinenews.blogspot.com/2009/12/help-for-visually-impaired.html
article
Sparrows in the Station
Q. Every time I wait in the Long Island Rail Road
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/l/long_island_rail_road/index.html?inline=nyt-org>
section of Pennsylvania Station, I hear chirping, tweeting birds. The
sound is louder near overhead speakers, so I’m assuming it’s a
recording. Is it supposed to make passengers calmer, like Muzak?
A. You are hearing a “talking kiosk,” designed to help visually impaired
passengers and others navigate the confusion of the station. The kiosk
is in the Long Island Rail Road’s main concourse, between the entrances
to Tracks 14 and 15.
“To help visually impaired customers locate the kiosk, it emits the song
of the lark sparrow (Chondestes grammacus), a bird species native to the
American West, that is found by audiologists to have a unique set of
phonetic properties considered effective for directional way-finding,”
said Susan McGowan, a spokeswoman for the railroad.
The current model was installed in December 2008, replacing an older one
that also chirped. This one features a touch-activated tactile map of
the station, visual displays for the partially sighted, and a voice
designed for phonetic clarity, Ms. McGowan said in an e-mail message. As
a customer touches different parts of the map, the kiosk describes the
location and gives directions. It also offers general information about
Penn Station and the Long Island Rail Road.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/13/nyregion/13fyi.html?_r=1
link to book excerpt
link to excerpt of book on Google Books
Access to mass transit for blind and visually impaired travelers
By Mark M. Uslan, American Foundation for the Blind, Alec F. Peck,
William R. Wiener
http://books.google.com/books?id=ISZ7VnncEUQC&pg=PA56&lpg=PA56&dq=%22visually+impaired%22+map&source=bl&ots=Ej4urtX5hX&sig=KQY1Isdw9tu8Q-7ervCnECcz4-M&hl=en#v=onepage&q=%22visually%20impaired%22%20map&f=false
excerpt of article
British Museum Launches Multimedia Guides in 11 Languages
*LONDON.-* A new set of handheld guides launches at the British Museum
<http://www.britishmuseum.org>, designed to allow visitors to learn more
about the British Museum’s collections. This includes:
• A Multimedia Guide available in 11 different languages, including
British Sign Language (BSL)
• An Audio Description Guide (in English only)
• A Children’s Multimedia Guide (in English only)
With an international audience of six million visitors each year, the
British Museum is always seeking to find new ways to engage visitors
from around the world with the collection. The new Multimedia Guide,
made possible by sponsorship from Korean Air, will be available in
eleven languages (English, Korean, Arabic, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Mandarin, Russian, and Spanish, and a separate guide for
British Sign Language) – the most comprehensive coverage of any museum
multimedia guide. The guides will provide a state-of-the-art means for
audiences to learn about the Museum’s unparalleled collection and make
the most of their visit.
Taking in over 220 objects from the Museum’s collection, the Multimedia
Guides will feature in-depth audio-visual commentaries. It will also
include three guided tours to allow audiences different ways to explore
the Museum’s collection: The Parthenon sculptures, Highlights of Ancient
Egypt and The Korean Gallery. The tours will include directions to help
the user find their way from one object to the next. The guide will also
feature an interactive map to help visitors orient themselves and easily
find objects and galleries.
The Children’s Guide (recommended for ages 5–11, in English only) will
include seven guided micro-tours focusing on different parts of the
world (ancient Egypt, ancient Greece and Rome, early Britain, Africa,
Americas and Oceania, Asia, and Middle East), accompanied by activity
suggestions and small interactive games around some of the objects.
The Audio Description Guide has in-depth descriptive audio commentaries
of each of the 220 objects for visually impaired people (English only),
while the British Sign Language Guide will launch with signed videos of
about 120 objects. Videos will be added so as to include the full 220
objects on the BSL Multimedia Guide by mid-January 2010.
http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=34823
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