“…More recently, attention has been placed on the development of smartphone-based technologies to facilitate visually impaired users in their wayfinding activities (Coughlan and Manduchi, 2009;Kane et al, 2009;Narasimhan et al, 2009;Swobodzinski and Raubal, 2009;Zöllner et al, 2011;Ahmetovic, 2013;Hakobyan et al, 2013;Caldini et al, 2015;Diamantatos and Kavallieratou, 2014;Ye et al, 2014;Griffin-Shirley et al, 2017). A widely under-explored component in these works, however, is the empirical assessment of smartphone-based wayfinding technologies in terms of their usefulness (i.e., the degree to which a product enables a user to achieve his or her goals, which includes the user's intrinsic motivation) and usability (i.e., the degree to which a product is able or fit to be used) of these technologies (Davis, 1989) for visually impaired users, which is particularly relevant for the study at hand.…”