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Medical Devices / Diagnostics News

Interface For Blind Computer Users To Be Developed By CCNY-Led Team With Award Of $330,000 From NSF

Main Category: Medical Devices / Diagnostics
Also Included In: Eye Health / Blindness;  IT / Internet / E-mail
Article Date: 08 Nov 2007 - 2:00 PDT

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A team of researchers from five institutions, led by The City College of New York (CCNY), has been awarded $330,000 over three years from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to develop a tactile surface that can facilitate communication between visually impaired and blind persons and computers.

Currently, visually impaired and blind computer users need access to Braille keyboards that cost several thousand dollars and can only handle text. "We're trying to make a cheaper device that would receive information tactilely and also be able to receive graphic information," said Dr. Ilona Kretzschmar, Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering at The Grove School of Engineering at CCNY and principal investigator on the grant.

Besides Professor Kretzschmar, the team includes: The project is "A Dynamic Tactile Interface for Visually Impaired and Blind People." It proposes to use an electronically addressable and deformable polymeric film to develop the interface device.

The interface will consist of three layers: The bottom layer will be a touch screen connected to a computer for audio feedback to communicate the position touched on the screen. The middle layer will have embedded isolated electrodes to address segments of the polymer top layer. The top layer will consist of an electro-active polymer film covered with a thin gold film. Segments of the top layer can extend out from the surface as voltage is applied from the corresponding electrode in the middle layer.

"In a world that increasingly depends on graphical, pictorial and multimedia technology, visually impaired and blind people have struggled to keep up," Professor Kretzschmar said. "If we can develop a viable dynamic tactile interface that allows graphic and pictorial information to be presented in real time in tactile rather than visual space, the amount of information available to visually impaired and blind individuals will increase dramatically."

Professor Kretzschmar is producing Janus particles -- particles with two halves and named for the Roman god Janus -- to be added to the polymer film to increase its electro-active properties and run mechanical functions. The film will then be tested to measure its addressability, maximum elongation, durability and readability.

Through focus groups with both sighted and blind individuals, researchers expect to obtain feedback on how touch can best convey visual graphic displays, how much the material needs to change for optimal tactile detection and what is the best way to receive the information. Further studies will test tactile interface parameters and fine-tune those parameters for optimal apprehension and interpretability. By the end of the third year, the team expects to have built a prototype dynamic tactile tablet.

Development of a dynamic tactile interface will result in deeper understanding of the touch sense, its relation to vision and sense substitution, the researchers say. The tactile polymer technology could find application in other areas that rely on tactile perception, e.g. sensory materials used in virtual reality, robotics and medical applications.

In addition, it has the potential to be inexpensive and widely applicable to undergraduate engineering student design projects. Some of these could lead to other custom-designed devices for people with physical disabilities.

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Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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About The Grove School of Engineering at CCNY

The Grove School of Engineering at The City College of New York, formerly the CCNY School of Engineering, is the only public engineering school within New York City. It offers Bachelors, Masters and Ph.D. degrees in seven fields: biomedical, chemical, civil, computer, electrical, and mechanical engineering and computer science. The School is recognized nationally for the excellence of its instructional and research programs and ranks among the most diverse engineering schools in the country. On November 28, 2005, the CUNY Board of Trustees named the School in honor of Dr. Andrew S. Grove, a member of the CCNY Class of 1960, and a co-founder and former chairman of Intel Corp., the world's leading producer of microprocessors.

About The City College of New York

For 160 years, The City College of New York has provided low-cost, high-quality education for New Yorkers in a wide variety of disciplines. Over 14,000 students pursue undergraduate and graduate degrees in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Architecture, the School of Education, the Grove School of Engineering and the Sophie Davis School of Biomedical Education.

Source: Ellis Simon
City College of New York




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