[accessibleimage] Re: Fwd: NIST Licenses Systems to Help the Blind 'See' Images
- From: "Tactile Display" <tactiledisplay@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: <accessibleimage@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 30 Oct 2007 11:18:59 -0400
Larry,
We better get off our asses and get something done soon, else we will have
wasted the last 4 years.
NIST just licensed its tactile graphics technology.
Peter
----- Original Message -----
From: "Judi Piscitello" <JPISCITE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <accessibleimage@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2007 8:22 AM
Subject: [accessibleimage] Fwd: NIST Licenses Systems to Help the Blind
'See' Images
"BlindNews Mailing List" <BlindNews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> 10/29/07 10:19 PM
>>>
Newswise.com
Monday, October 29, 2007
NIST Licenses Systems to Help the Blind 'See' Images
By NIST
Source: National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
Released: Mon 29-Oct-2007, 08:00 ET
Description
A recently completed licensing agreement for two novel National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) technologies may help bring affordable
graphic reading systems for the blind and visually impaired to market. The
two systems bring electronic images to life in the same way that Braille
makes words readable.
CAption: NIST Researchers John Roberts (right) and Oliver Slattery (left)
using the tactile graphic display device to depict the NIST logo.
Newswise - A recently completed licensing agreement for two novel National
Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) technologies may help bring
affordable graphic reading systems for the blind and visually impaired to
market. The two systems bring electronic images to life in the same way that
Braille makes words readable.
ELIA Life Technology Inc. of New York, N.Y., licensed for commercialization
both the tactile graphic display device and fingertip graphic reader
developed by NIST researchers. The former, first introduced as a prototype
in 2002, allows a person to feel a succession of images on a reusable
surface by raising some 3,600 small pins (actuator points) into a pattern
that can be locked in place, read by touch and then reset to display the
next graphic in line. Each image-from scanned illustrations, Web pages,
electronic books or other sources-is sent electronically to the reader where
special software determines how to create a matching tactile display. (For
more information, see "NIST 'Pins' Down Imaging System for the Blind" at
http://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/factsheet/visualdisplay.htm.)
An array of about 100 small, very closely spaced (1/10 of a millimeter
apart) actuator points set against a user's fingertip is the key to the more
recently created "tactile graphic display for localized sensory
stimulation." To "view" a computer graphic with this technology, a blind or
visually impaired person moves the device-tipped finger across a surface
like a computer mouse to scan an image in computer memory. The computer
sends a signal to the display device and moves the actuators against the
skin to "translate" the pattern, replicating the sensation of the finger
moving over the pattern being displayed. With further development, the
technology could possibly be used to make fingertip tactile graphics
practical for virtual reality systems or give a detailed sense of touch to
robotic control (teleoperation) and space suit gloves.
The inspiration for both NIST graphic displays came from a "bed of nails"
toy found in a novelty store. Watching the pins in the toy depress under
fingers and then return to their original state started the researchers
thinking about how the principle could be applied to electronic signals.
Persons interested in licensing these or other NIST technologies should
contact Terry Lynch, NIST Office of Technology Partnerships,
terry.lynch@xxxxxxxx, (301) 975-2691.
http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/534796/
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- References:
- [accessibleimage] Fwd: NIST Licenses Systems to Help the Blind 'See' Images
- From: Judi Piscitello
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- » [accessibleimage] Re: Fwd: NIST Licenses Systems to Help the Blind 'See' Images
"BlindNews Mailing List" <BlindNews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> 10/29/07 10:19 PM >>>
- [accessibleimage] Fwd: NIST Licenses Systems to Help the Blind 'See' Images
- From: Judi Piscitello