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PARLOMA – A Novel Human-Robot Interaction System for Deaf-Blind Remote Communication

Ludovico Orlando Russo, Giuseppe Airó Farulla, Daniele Pianu, Alice Rita Salgarella, Marco Controzzi, Christian Cipriani, Calogero Maria Oddo, Carlo Geraci, Stefano Rosa, Marco Indaco

Year
2015
Citations
28

Abstract

Deaf-blindness forces people to live in isolation. At present, there is no existing technological solution enabling two (or many) deaf-blind people to communicate remotely among themselves in tactile Sign Language (t-SL). When resorting to t-SL, deaf-blind people can communicate only with people physically present in the same place, because they are required to reciprocally explore their hands to exchange messages. We present a preliminary version of PARLOMA, a novel system to enable remote communication between deaf-blind persons. It is composed of a low-cost depth sensor as the only input device, paired with a robotic hand as the output device. Essentially, any user can perform hand-shapes in front of the depth sensor. The system is able to recognize a set of hand-shapes that are sent over the web and reproduced by an anthropomorphic robotic hand. PARLOMA can work as a “telephone” for deaf-blind people. Hence, it will dramatically improve the quality of life of deaf-blind persons. PARLOMA has been presented and supported by the main Italian deaf-blind association, Lega del Filo d'Oro. End users are involved in the design phase.

Keywords

Sign languageComputer scienceDeaf blindHuman–computer interactionSet (abstract data type)BlindnessIsolation (microbiology)Screen readerRobotVisually impaired

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