Title
Partial zoom on small display for people suffering from presbyopia
Abstract
When presbyopic people use digital devices, they often zoom in the display, because it is not in focus when they move it close to face. We have proposed the automatic display zoom system for presbyopic people [Fang and Funahashi 2018]. However, some of the information on the small display has gone out of it after zooming-in (Fig. 2(a) to (b)). It is necessary to scroll it frequently, and a bother. On the other hand, a conventional partial zoom means like a magnifying glass is also usually provided (Fig. 2(a) to (c)). The part around a zoomed area is cut off, and it is necessary to move the glass frequently too. People sometimes want to skim through sentences and understand an overview. By the way, although it is difficult to read blurry words (Fig. 3(a)), you can guess and read a sentence includes the blurry words when some other words are clear (Fig. 3(b)). Therefore, we reconsider the zoom-in method for presbyopic people. For example, the area paid attention is zoomed in to read clearly, and the magnification rate of the area around it is gradually reduced to zoom-out rate so that all information is displayed in the small display even though some words are zoomed out. It is expected that you can guess and read also the unzoomed-in words like blurred words around the clear zoomed-in words. We propose a suitable partial zoom-in function that allows you to skim a document.
Year
DOI
Keywords
2019
10.1145/3306214.3338581
partial display zoom, presbyopia, smartphone
Field
DocType
ISSN
Scroll,Computer vision,Computer graphics (images),Computer science,Zoom,Magnifying glass,Artificial intelligence,Magnification,Presbyopia,Sentence
Conference
978-1-4503-6314-3
ISBN
Citations 
PageRank 
978-1-4503-6314-3
0
0.34
References 
Authors
1
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Huiyi Fang100.34
Kenji Funahashi21715.68
Shinji Mizuno3792153.37
Yuji Iwahori415956.83