Abstract

In visually impaired families, there are different needs in terms of the access to drinking water, and the existing research on the design of water dispensers is insufficient. In order to solve this problem, a diverse analysis, based on the inclusive design concept, of household users’ operating abilities and water dispenser preferences was carried out. Subsequently and guided by the analysis, a new water dispenser product was developed. The methods used to extrapolate the needs of visually impaired families were observation and interviews, while the questionnaire research was used to understand the user preferences. Secondly, the accessibility of the existing water dispenser was tested for visually impaired, elderly, middle-aged, and young users in the visually impaired family. Three design strategies were proposed that combine the needs and product preferences of the users: the multimode simplification of steps, water quality detection, and adaptive multichannel feedback. The water dispenser was redesigned on the basis of these. On the premise of meeting the different abilities of the users in visually impaired families, the design practice improves the users’ experience of water dispensers, and provides a practical method reference that has value for related product designs.

Highlights

  • With the advent of an aging society and the development of the digital age, the per capita screen-use time has increased, and there is a rapid growth trend of visually impaired people, including blind and low-vision people [1]

  • A design practice was carried out to solve this problem by reducing the visual requirements for the use of water dispensers for the visually impaired

  • The visually impaired and those with normal vision can actively choose the operation mode according to their current needs and abilities

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Summary

Introduction

With the advent of an aging society and the development of the digital age, the per capita screen-use time has increased, and there is a rapid growth trend of visually impaired people, including blind and low-vision people [1]. A design practice was carried out to solve this problem by reducing the visual requirements for the use of water dispensers for the visually impaired. The physical button operation, the water outlet button, with a certain angle, and the angular shape, which facilitates the recognition of the direction for the visually impaired, were designed to meet the needs of the visually impaired for using the water dispenser independently, and for improving their use experiences. The verification results show that the needs of the visually impaired and normal-sighted users at home are mutually exclusive. Taking the design of the home environment as an example, they describe how to respond to different needs in a differentiated way so as to maximize the design value of the whole system and achieve the purpose of inclusiveness [11]

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