Title
Seeing Colours: Addressing Colour Vision Deficiency with Vision Augmentations using Computational Glasses
Abstract
AbstractColour vision deficiency is a common visual impairment that cannot be compensated for using optical lenses in traditional glasses, and currently remains untreatable. In our work, we report on research on Computational Glasses for compensating colour vision deficiency. While existing research only showed corrected images within the periphery or as an indirect aid, Computational Glasses build on modified standard optical see-through head-mounted displays and directly modulate the user’s vision, consequently adapting their perception of colours. In this work, we present an exhaustive literature review of colour vision deficiency compensation and subsequent findings; several prototypes with varying advantages—from well-controlled bench prototypes to less controlled but higher application portable prototypes; and a series of studies evaluating our approach starting with proving its efficacy, comparing to the state-of-the-art, and extending beyond static lab prototypes looking at real world applicability. Finally, we evaluated directions for future compensation methods for computational glasses.
Year
DOI
Venue
2022
10.1145/3486899
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction
Keywords
DocType
Volume
Computational glasses, augmented reality, colour blindness, colour vision deficiency, augmented human, near-eye displays, head-mounted displays, augmented vision
Journal
29
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
3
1073-0516
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
0
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Jonathan Sutton100.34
Tobias Langlotz239936.80
Alexander Plopski300.34