This type of helmets is designed to protect the deaf’s riding safety. The LED projection on the back of the helmets can actively cause the drivers’ attention. When the cars come near, the radar detector can deliver the messages to the deaf through the shock mount on the two sides of the helmets. It can remind the deaf of avoiding the cars. It sets up the active safety relations between the drivers and the deaf. Contemporary, it can both have active and passive safety properties.
I am a human-computer interaction Ph.D. student research on everyday design in the School of Interactive Arts + Technology at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. I supervised by Prof. Ron Wakkary and Prof. Willams Odom in the everyday design studio. I hold the Scholarship from China Scholarship Council of the Ministry of Education, P.R.C and Tang Lixin (chairman of Shinesun Group). My research background range from product design to industrial design and mechanical engineering.
The everyday design studio, co-directed by Ron Wakkary and William Odom in the School of Interactive Arts and Technology (SIAT) at Simon Fraser University, is a design research studio focusing on exploring interaction design. Our research investigates the changing nature of interaction design in response to the increasing role technology plays in mediating everyday practices like DIY, amateur experts, reminiscence, self-exploration, social connection, the making of home life, and so on.