Alternative Sensory Information Displays
Public Usability Tests
Try an Emoti-Chair @ the Coffee Lab
Located in the Sideshow Cafe
1300 Gerrard St. East, Toronto.
Monday - Friday 8am - 8pm
Saturday, Sunday 9am - 5pm-
Media Links
ORGANic Evolution III
Date: Saturday, March 13, 2010
St. Andrew’s Lutheran Church 383 Jarvis St., Toronto, ON
Event Footage - Courtasy of Steve MannNovember 04, 2009
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The Emoti-Chair takes its place at its new home at the Bob Rumball Foundation for the Deaf
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October 24, 2009
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X Avant New Music Festival - A New Way of Hearing. Featuring the Emoti-Chairs
March 5, 2009
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Concert Accessible to the
Deaf and Hard of Hearing
The Emoti-Chair: Current News and Events
If you are interested in being one of the first people to own an Emoti-Chair, please subscribe to our early adoptor list for more information on the upcoming release of our newest home-entertainment system.
Past Events
Media Advisory (word document)
The ASID Project Description
The ASID project explores alternative methods of presenting sensory information from one modality to a different modality. The current focus is on the translation of sound into vibration, where we use the Emoti-Chair as a system for making music and other sounds more accessible as physical vibrations.
The sensory substutition of audio information as tactile stimuil is mainly situationed within the domains of music and film, where we are investigating the use of diffrent tactile stimuil to represent sound originating from music, background or environmental sounds, and speech prosody.
The Model Human Cochlea is the sensory substitution technique we use to translation music into multiple vibrotactile channels in the Emoti-Chair.
Voice coils are our primary mode for presenting sound as vibrations, with music presented along the body, speech displayed along the arms.
Control Interfaces
Another area of our research is situated in the domain of interface and system designs to support multimodal crossmodal displays.
Topics of this research include microprocessor design, user interface designs, and interaction designs supporting alternative information displays that focus on sensory substitution approachess.
Research Team
The team includes members of the CLT lab and the SMART lab:
For information regarding the ASID Project, please contact Maria.Karam @ ryerson.ca
March 18, 2010




