Skip to main content

Smartphones smooth the journey for visually impaired

Moves to make life easier and safer for vulnerable and impaired road users are gaining strength on both sides of the Atlantic. A recent webcast by the US Roadway Safety Institute, based at the University of Minnesota, showcased work in progress on a positioning and mapping methodology using Bluetooth and smartphone technologies to support situation awareness and wayfinding for the visually impaired.
May 13, 2016 Read time: 4 mins
The Minnesota Traffic Observatory’s Chen-Fu Liao.
Moves to make life easier and safer for vulnerable and impaired road users are gaining strength on both sides of the Atlantic.

A recent webcast by the US Roadway Safety Institute, based at the 584 University of Minnesota, showcased work in progress on a positioning and mapping methodology using Bluetooth and smartphone technologies to support situation awareness and wayfinding for the visually impaired.

Chen-Fu Liao, senior systems engineer at the university’s Minnesota Traffic Observatory, highlighted the fact that 40 million Americans aged 40 and over have some kind of sight problem, with numbers of the blind expected to double by 2030. There are, he acknowledged, environmental cues available to support such travellers.

But existing smartphone apps typically fail to give sufficiently detailed information on, for example, the physical nature of a pedestrian crossing and the timing of its signals.

He emphasised the importance of overcoming both informational and the physical issues, and showcased the mobile accessible pedestrian system (MAPS) that the university is developing.

This uses smartphone access to deliver, in audio form, highly specific information to visually impaired pedestrians to help overcome the difficulties they often experience in locating the pedestrian push button on a signal at a crosswalk (see panel). With a single tap on the phone they can check the orientation and geometry of the intersection. A double tap then confirms their intention to cross and sends an appropriate message to the signal controller.

Following a trial which exposed the impact of urban canyons on the reliability of the GPS-based location of crosswalks, a further stage used Bluetooth low energy (BLE) modules to feed more specific guidance into smartphones. The modules have a self-monitoring role and will send out alerts of any failure to function, as well as ensuring that the information being supplied to visually impaired pedestrians is up-to-date.

The standard, commercially available BLE tags are designed to be detected or discovered as location markers, and not to communicate with each other. The project has therefore gone on to develop an innovative Bluetooth smart system, ‘BLE-smart’.

This integrates an off-the-shelf module that works in passive or active modes with an interface that enables it to sense similar units operating within its communication range. The overall system works with a local digital map of an unfamiliar or hazardous environment, developed with the support of a dedicated positioning and mapping algorithm.

Each BLE-smart unit is then aware of, and can check on, its neighbours to ensure the correctness of the local map and of the positioning information being delivered in what may be a GPS-denied environment. In turn, a geospatial database containing BLE-smart locations and messages integrates with a smartphone app. The aim is to ensure that users always receive the correct audio information on traffic signal timing and the intersection geometry, at the correct location.

Across in Europe, Jean-Michel Henchoz, of global automotive technology supplier Denso, has warned a European audience that VRUs will be unaware of whether or not an oncoming vehicle is automated.

Speaking at a webinar organised by 374 ERTICO-ITS Europe’s iMobility Forum, he highlighted the priority need for behavioural research into specific subgroups of VRUs, and the  development of both purpose-designed wearable and infrastructural detection technologies, especially for the benefit of the elderly.

Better buttons

Current US accessible pedestrian signal (APS) systems, requires users to search for a special button to trigger audio or vibrotactile guidance. This often diverts users from their natural path of travel, which they typically use as an alignment cue for starting to cross.

The relatively high installation and maintenance costs of these systems deter many public agencies and the audio guidance may be inaudible at peak periods (due to traffic noise), and disturbing to other pedestrians at quiet times. The university believes that there is room for substantial improvements in both design and accessibility.


For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Data can help us mind the transportation gender gap
    April 18, 2023
    A gendered perspective in public transport is essential if we are to achieve equality, suggest Emma Chapman and Naomi Grant of WhereIsMyTransport 
  • Meeting the challenges of smartcard fare payment
    July 4, 2012
    David Crawford monitors a growing trend in contactless smartcard ticketing The north east United States has become a hive of activity in the smart fare payment arena. In October 2011, the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) published, as a preliminary to an imminent procurement process, the detailed concept of its New Fare Payment System (NFPS). Based on open payment industry standards, this is designed to be implemented on all MTA bus and subway services operated by New York City Transit (
  • Control rooms adapt to tech changes
    July 8, 2019
    From IP-based systems to an increasing array of choice, traffic and transit management has changed a lot in the last few years. Adam Hill talks to some of the leading players in the control room business
  • Wrong Way Detection System prevents accidents, improves safety
    January 31, 2012
    In 2006, within a span of four months, two incidents of drivers entering the 16km-long Westpark Tollway in Houston, Texas resulted in horrific accidents that caused a number of fatalities. As a result, Harris County Toll Road Authority (HCTRA) began investigating technologies that could help detect vehicles entering the tollway in the wrong direction.