DisneyOma
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2015
- Messages
- 7,461
With regards to whether I'm talking about adjudicating eye-contact with the chair vs person in the chair, from a computer vision (CV) perspective it's 6 of one half dozen of the other. Anything that measures one is going to measure the other. But actually this holds true even when the mobility-assisted person has their back turned. Most people simply do not spend as much time looking at people in wheelchairs as they do looking at able bodied people.
"Good manners" is an interesting spin on this and I've heard it before. Except it is never good manners to treat someone differently than others. Especially when doing so makes you more likely to walk into them.
No, I'm talking about something that is a deeply subconscious/unconscious behavior. Human brains light up inside when they encounter familiar patterns, there is a whole new(ish) science on this using FMRS MRI brain scanning. I suspect that whatever the brain looks like when most people sees an able bodied person, it looks very different when it sees a disabled person in a wheelchair or ECV. It just has to. And the deepest parts of our behavior, the ones that react and engage without thinking will have to treat someone in a chair as different as well.
This isn't about a person's manners. This is more like the phenomena motorcyclists will tell you is commonplace where someone in a car will make eye contact, nod, smile, even wave at them and the next moment drive straight at them as if they weren't there. I'm not accusing humanity of being rude. But stories, here and anywhere mobility challenged people chat, abound of all sorts of people simply stepping into, in front of, even walking bodily over a mobility assisted person, often without any warning at all. And often, the person who makes the misstep is the one most shocked.
From my perspective, it's something to be studied because I would like to build a mobility system that enjoys the same careless ease of motion that I enjoy as an able bodied walking person. On the other hand, when I hear someone worry about what other people will think when they see them in a wheelchair or ECV, it's a perverse sort of comfort to say that they will hardly see you at all.
You can't have it both ways, cobright. You 'suspect' things, etc, and state them as fact, then decide what others state can't be fact. You're harming your cause more than helping it, IMO.
About the "manners" - that's how we were brought up, and I never said it was a good thing. We used to lock different people up in institutions, and that was not a good thing at all. But that was how, until a few generations ago, society treated the differently-abled.
Also, it was interesting to note that your machine measures "eye contact" on a large mass. How does it measure that? Does it measure it on other human beings the same way? For instance, if someone was looking down, and saw someone's feet, does that count? Or is it just eye to eye contact, or face, or upper torso? Front, back, etc? It's a cool thing to measure, but I'd like the parameters, perhaps in a different thread

Trip Report – So I did go with my new second hand wheelchair. It made things easier for me but so much worse for my kids. I got an XL wheelchair that can accommodate 440 lbs (in part so my husband could use it as well and he’s big big guy). Turns out, that is really hard to push. I’m around 200lbs, so I might look for a lighter one next time. I didn’t use it every day. Somedays I just used a brace support, and cane.
You guys were right though – no one cared. The character meet and greets were incredibly nice about things. I even had some nice people push me once when my wheelchair got stuck in the Hagrid line and my kids couldn’t get me out.
The only exception was the disability services folks at guest services. I wanted to get a DAS for cane/brace days. Sure I can usually walk, but standing long term not so much. I read ahead, I knew you would still have to wait the allotted time and come back later. I thought a DAS would make it easier for me to not use a wheelchair during my better times. I figured I would walk as much as I could, and sit during a ride-wait. I went to guest services and explained this and they said “All of our queues are designed to be wheelchair friendly, so if you have mobility issues, get a wheel chair.” I said I want to walk when I can, and I don’t want to have to pay for a wheelchair. They repeated that they do not do DAS for mobility issues. I asked if the wheelchair was going to be complimentary. They said no. I tried to explain that I wanted to be able to be mobile, but that I simply couldn’t stand long-term in a line. I explained the whole situation, and they still said “No, you’re not allowed to get a DAS for mobility issues.”
I want to point out that I did have my cane with me, but this was at the very start of my day, when I still have plenty of energy. So maybe I didn’t “look disabled”, but it really ticked me off. I was treated like I was scamming them, just so I could sit down instead of stand in line. What in the world do they give out DAS for? Is it PTSD-only? That part was pretty frustrating. Still, I did have a wheelchair, but since it was the extra wide one, it did not in fact fit in all of the queues. I got stuck on a few doorways and barely grazed through other entrances.
I did have a great time. I *am* glad I used a wheelchair. Everyone but disability services either ignored me or was considerate. And I didn’t feel like a lazy fatso who can’t even pick her butt out of a chair, which I admit is some bad mouthing I mentally give myself sometimes. I wish I knew how to stop my mental self-harming.
I would go again in a wheelchair, I would just get something more lightweight, and I would avoid Disability Access Services. Thank you everyone for your encouragement, and data-backed information.
Sounds like you need to use an ECV, not a wheelchair. DAS was not meant for mobility related issues, and personal responsibility is important. Why would you expect someone to provide your mobility device for free? I get that they do have a few ECVs at grocery stores and some chain department stores, but it would be way too expensive for Disney to hand out free wheelchairs and everyone would expect one.
I'm actually glad that a CM stood ground and didn't cave and give out a DAS more a mobility issue. So many times they are bullied into doing so.