[tabi] Re: [VICUG-L] [leadership] Students Develop Cane With E-Tags to Guide Blind

  • From: "Betsy" <betsaw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <tabi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 10 Aug 2009 05:24:02 -0400

This is awesome and I believe it is one of the many features we will see in a 
cell phone one day.

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Lynn Evans 
  To: tabi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Sunday, August 09, 2009 9:02 PM
  Subject: [tabi] [VICUG-L] [leadership] Students Develop Cane With E-Tags to 
Guide Blind


  August 3, 2009
  Students Develop Cane With E-Tags to Guide Blind
  By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
  Filed at 3:33 p.m.  ET

  DETROIT (AP) -- A cane equipped with the technology that 
  retailers use to
  tag merchandise could help blind people avoid obstacles.

  An engineering professor and five students at Central Michigan 
  University
  have created a ''Smart Cane'' to read electronic navigational 
  tags
  installed
  between buildings to aid the blind in reaching their destinations 
  more
  easily.

  ''This project started as a way for me to teach students to see 
  and
  understand the ways that engineering can be used for the greater 
  good,''
  said Kumar Yelamarthi, the professor and project leader.  ''We 
  wanted to do
  something that would help people and make our campus more 
  accessible.''

  During the spring term, Yelamarthi and five senior engineering 
  students
  tested the cane, which is equipped with Radio Frequency 
  Identification
  technology, similar to what retailers put on products to keep 
  them from
  being stolen.

  The Smart Cane contains an ultrasonic sensor that is paired with 
  a
  miniature
  navigational system inside a messenger-style bag worn across the 
  shoulder.

  For the test, the students installed identification tags between 
  two
  buildings on the campus in Mount Pleasant, Mich..  A speaker 
  located on the
  bag strap gave audio alerts when the system detected an obstacle 
  and told
  the user which direction to move.

  Students wearing glasses that simulate visual impairment tested 
  the cane.

  The students also created a vibrating glove to assist those who 
  are both
  visually and hearing-impaired.

  Yelamarthi said it's one of the first outdoor applications of 
  RFID and said
  he plans for students in upcoming classes to further refine the 
  system
  while
  he seeks grants to speed the research.

  The next step probably involves using the system in a wider area.  
  Down the
  line, Yelamarthi wants to work toward integrating the Smart 
  Cane's data
  with
  GPS.

  Copyright 2009 The Associated Press

  --
  Hugh "Butch" Arnold
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