September 21st, 2008 by
Filed under: Transportation
Oh MIT, do the wonders that come from your halls ever cease? Yet another remarkable development is emerging from the fabled institution, and this time it’s an autonomous wheelchair that can remember important places in a given building (read: the hospital ward, your house, the local arcade, etc.) and then take you there on command. In other words, the voice recognizing chair could understand phrases of direction, such as “head to the kitchen,” and it would take on the burden of navigating the halls while letting the rider chill. The researchers are implementing a system that can learn and adapt to the individual user, and in the future, they’d like to add in a collision-avoidance system and mechanical arms to help patients lift and move objects. Say, can regular joes / janes buy these? We’re totally feeling this over the Segway.
[Via medGadget]
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Posted in university, mit, research, autonomous, medical, handicap, handicapped, transport, disabled, voice command, VoiceCommand, transporter, wheelchair, autonomous wheelchair, AutonomousWheelchair | No Comments »
September 18th, 2008 by
Filed under: GPS

We’ve seen plenty of specialized GPS units, but this new BBNav device from UK-based Navevo looks to be the first one that’s designed specifically to help disabled drivers, or their families and caretakers. To that end, the system comes pre-loaded with information on more than 10,000 “Blue Badge” parking spaces and 3,500 disabled accessible car parks in 150 cities and towns in the UK, as well as a database of more than 20,000 points of interest that are easily accessible for people with disabilities. The unit itself also looks to stack up pretty well against the usual GPS fare, with it packing a 4.3-inch touchscreen, NAVTEQ maps of the UK and Ireland, and hands free Bluetooth calling capabilities, among other standard features. No word on a price just yet, but those interested can sign up to be notified when it’s available at the link below.
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Posted in gps, disabled, bbnav, navevo | No Comments »
August 26th, 2008 by
Filed under: Wearables
It turns out that the tongue isn’t tied to the spinal cord (had we paid better attention in Bio101, we’d have known that), which goes a long way towards keeping it unimpared in the event of spinal cord injury. A team at Georgia Tech is developing a tongue-based apparatus for disabled people that, which not as elegantly packaged as the GRAViTONUS device we’ve seen earlier, fashions a pointing device from a small tongue-mounted magnet and sensors near the cheeks. The team has promised interactivity way beyond what can be done with “sip and puff” input methods; think “mouth replaces mouse” and you’ve got the idea. Hopefully Mavis Beacon tongue-typing and the incorporation of haptic feedback won’t be far behind.
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Posted in georgia tech, GeorgiaTech, disabled, tongue, magnet | No Comments »
May 5th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming

Here’s your heartwarming story for the day. Microsoft has teamed up with Companions in Courage in order to bring “hundreds” of Xbox 360 kiosks to children’s hospitals across the nation, and the gaming stations have already been installed at Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital of New York-Presbyterian, Children’s Hospital & Regional Medical Center of Seattle and the Children’s Hospital of Orange County, California. The customized units are “hospital-friendly” and come pre-loaded with a variety of E and E10+ rated games, Y-rated television programs, G-rated movies and the Xbox Live headset / Vision camera in order for gamers to play online. Speaking of, each kiosk is wired to a private Live network which “allows hospitalized children across the country to play games and chat” with each other. There’s no word on where the stations are slated to arrive outside of the three venues already mentioned, but those interested in broadening the reach of the endeavor can feel free to donate to the cause.
[Via OhGizmo]
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Posted in Microsoft, xbox 360, Xbox360, partner, partnership, handicap, handicapped, Children, hospital, xbox live, XboxLive, disabled, kiosk, Companions in Courage, CompanionsInCourage, non-profit | No Comments »
November 13th, 2007 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets

If you’re suddenly overcome with an eerie feeling of déjà vu, fret not, as this idea has certainly been brainstormed before. As scientists aim to make prosthetic limbs more user-friendly, a certain physiatrist at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago and professor at Northwestern University has developed a technique that enables artificial arms to react directly to the brain’s thoughts. The process, dubbed targeted muscle reinnervation (TMR), works by rewiring residual nerves that once carried information to the now-lost appendage to the chest; when the person thinks to move their arm, the chest muscle contracts, and with the help of an electromyogram (EMG), the signal is “directed to a microprocessor in the artificial arm which decodes the data and tells the arm what to do.” Currently, “only” four movements are possible after the procedure, but studies are already in full swing to determine if TMR could be used to bless future patients with an even fuller of range of motion.
[Image courtesy of ScienceDaily]
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Posted in touch, health, science, neural prosthetic, NeuralProsthetic, prosthetic, handicapped, brain, disabled, muscle, prosthetics, targeted muscle reinnervation, TargetedMuscleReinnervation, think, thinking, tmr | No Comments »