Technology to Enhance Olympic Experience for Fans with Hearing and Visual Impairment in Paris 2024

The technology will help the aficionados con hearing and visual impairment in the stadiums, to follow some sports that will be in the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

Audio description, vests with vibration, touch tablets: various devices will allow fans with disabilities to follow sports events with the rest of the public in various stadiums.

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“The ball is sent from the right, it enters and leaves the painted area [o “llave”] and it is Monaco who recovers the ball. The painted area is that rectangular part under the basket.” In the earpiece, a voice describes to the blind spectator everything that happens at the Bercy Arena in the French capital.

On the occasion of the French Cup basketball finals at the end of April, various fans with visual impairments were able to follow the games on the court thanks to that audio description. Equipped with a special device, they can thus listen to a sports commentator describing the actions while another voice completes the experience with elements of visual description, all within an experience organized by Optic 2000 before the Olympic Games.

“We usually listen to the atmosphere, but we don’t know why the public is shouting,” says Sofiane Ahmad, 31, who thanks to this technological system has been able to enjoy rugby or soccer matches, as well as competitions, in the stands of stadiums. Of athletics.

“This way you feel the energy that is transmitted when the fans shout all together, you live in the moment,” he is happy.

A shared “pleasure”

Usually, this Paris Saint-Germain fan follows his football club’s matches on the radio, where the comments are more descriptive than on television.

“I build in my head what is happening on the field,” he says. Before losing his sight in a traffic accident when he was 19, he himself played soccer.

Now he plays football adapted for people with vision problems or those deprived of it. This has allowed him to create a community with fans in the same situation and they often follow the games together, those who can watch something do so on television and people with visual disabilities do so on the radio: “It is a pleasure that we share.”

Pierre-Marie Micheli, also blind since suffering an accident at the age of 25, especially enjoys experiencing rugby matches through audio description with his father.

“I enjoyed it as much as I did watching it,” says this 37-year-old man, who before his accident practiced rugby and mountain biking.

He was also able to use a touch tablet, with a magnet that moves at the same time as the ball during a rugby match.

“I could feel with my fingers, in real time, the ball leaving the field. “This way I could shout at the same time as everyone else,” he explains about this technological tool, which will also be used in the Olympic Games.

In an enthusiastic atmosphere, with chants and vuvuzelas at the Bercy Arena, Khaled Kharraz, who is hearing impaired, was also able to enjoy basketball thanks to a vest that converts sounds into vibrations connected to his back.

“I feel everything”

“I feel everything: the ball bouncing on the ground, the steps of the players moving, the crowd shouting when a basket is made. The vibrations are different, you just have to observe what happens to make the connection,” he explains. “I’m totally in,” he says, happy to be able to enjoy the game with a friend.

Still not very widespread, these devices are mainly used for football, tennis and Paralympic disciplines. The associations hope that the Olympic Games will serve to accelerate its general implementation.

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The audio description will be available in Paris 2024 in six sports (football, athletics, judo, swimming, tennis, horse riding) and ten Paralympic disciplines in thirteen of the Olympic venues, explained the Organizing Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games of the French capital.

“We will have 460 hours of audio description and we have targeted the sports that visual impairment experts have told us are most interesting for them,” Ludivine Munos, head of Paralympic integration at Paris 2024, explained to AFP.

The touch tablet will be present in six event facilities, to be able to follow the football, rugby, basketball and four Paralympic ball sports competitions.

EAM

2024-05-04 23:53:43
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