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Sensory Substitution

Also known as: Cross-Modal Substitution

The use of one sensory modality to convey information typically perceived through another. For example, converting visual information into tactile or auditory signals for blind users, or representing sound through vibration for deaf users. Sensory substitution is a fundamental principle in assistive technology design, enabling access to information and experiences that would otherwise be inaccessible due to sensory impairment.

Category: assistive technology · interaction design

Related: Haptic Feedback · Sonification · Multi-Sensory Feedback

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