@inproceedings{2aea0dca47754b08bb99c075166cfa47,
title = "Presenting Non-Verbal Communication to Blind Users in Brainstorming Sessions",
abstract = "In co-located meetings, which are part of our professional and educational lives, information exchange relies not only on information exchange using artifacts like bubbles in mind-maps or equations presented on electronic whiteboards in classrooms, but also to a large extent on non-verbal communication. In the past much effort was done to make the artifact level accessible but also non-verbal communication heavily relies on the visual channel to which blind people do not have access. Thereby co-located meetings are seen as first domain to research accessibility of non-verbal communication, which are well defined and should lead to more general research on access to non-verbal communication. We present a first prototypical system which allows experimenting with access to non-verbal communication elements by blind people using both the input from a ”human” transcriber or automatic tracking and recognition of non-verbal communication cues.",
author = "Stephan P{\"o}lzer and Klaus Miesenberger",
year = "2014",
month = jul,
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-319-08598-8",
volume = "8547",
series = "Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS)",
publisher = "Springer",
pages = "220 -- 225",
editor = "{Miesenberger, K.; Fels, D.; Archambault, D.; Penaz, P.; Zagler, W.}",
booktitle = "{"}Computers Helping People with Special Needs{"} - Proceedings 14th ICCHP Paris 2014",
}