(Press-News.org)
VIDEO:
A totally blind subject makes her way up a corridor. The system uses Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM) software to build maps of the environment and identify a safe path...
Click here for more information.
For the visually impaired, navigating city streets or neighborhoods has constant challenges. And most such people still must rely on a very rudimentary technology—a simple cane—to help them make their way through a complex world.
A group of University of Southern California engineering researchers is working to change that by developing a robot vision-based mobility aid for the visually impaired. A design first shown a year ago is now being further developed.
The need is clear. According to the World Health Organization, 39 million people worldwide are totally blind and a much larger number, 284 million people, are visually impaired. In the United States, according to the American Foundation for the Blind, 109,000 visually impaired people use long white canes to get around. Guide dogs? About 7,000 nationwide.
"There are many limitations to canes for the visually impaired, from low hanging branches to large objects," according to Gérard Medioni, a professor in the Institute for Robotics and Intelligent Systems at USC Viterbi. "We wanted to build an effective system that would provide new opportunities for the visually impaired."
Medioni and his colleagues, including James Weiland, a Viterbi School associate professor of biomedical engineering who is also a professor of ophthalmology at the USC Keck School of Medicine's Doheny Eye Institute; and Vivek Pradeep, a recent Viterbi Ph.D who is now at the Applied Sciences Group of Microsoft, have developed software that "sees" the world, and linked it to a system that provides tactile messages to alert users about objects in their paths. Pradeep won the 2010 USC Department of Biomedical Engineering Grodins Graduate Research Award and a USC Stevens Institute 'most inventive' award for his work on the system.
The system uses cameras worn on the head connected to PCs that use Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM) software to build maps of the environment and identify a safe path through obstacles. This route information is conveyed to the user through a guide vest that includes four micro motors located on an individual's shoulder and waist that vibrate like cell phones.
For example, a vibration on the left shoulder indicates a higher object to the left, such as a low-hanging branch, and the individual can in turn use that information to take a new path. Medioni said that canes have clear limitations with larger objects, from walls to concrete structures, and the technology will enable users to avoid falls and injuries.
The USC team tested the system on blind subjects at the Braille Institute. The users there "like the system, and they feel it really helps them," Medioni said. "We greatly appreciate the cooperation and help of the Institute and the test subjects," added Weiland.
Medioni is pleased with the prototype of the system presented at the 2010 International IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBS) Conference, and more recently, May 1 at the 2011 meeting of Association for Research in Vision and Opthalmology. But he and the team are now working to improve it. The current head-mounted camera is bulky, and the team is now working on a micro-camera system that could be attached to glasses. The goal is to have a new system in place by the end of 2011, he said.
INFORMATION:
The National Science Foundation and the U.S. Army funded the research, which will be used to help veterans who have been blinded during their service in the military, along with the W.M. Keck Foundation
'Guide vests' -- robotic navigation aids for the visually impaired
USC engineers are creating a high-tech aid for blind and partially blind people who have long depended on white canes as their only tool for getting around
2011-05-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study shows 19 percent of young adults have high blood pressure
2011-05-26
Roughly 19 percent of young adults may have high blood pressure, according to an analysis of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health), which is supported by the National Institutes of Health.
The researchers took blood pressure readings of more than 14,000 men and women between 24 and 32 years of age who were enrolled in the long-running study.
The analysis was conducted by Kathleen Mullan Harris, Ph.D., principal investigator of the study, and colleagues at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The study's first author was Quynh ...
What to Look for in a Personal Injury Lawyer
2011-05-26
If you have suffered a personal injury in the Atlanta area, you will probably need to find a qualified Georgia personal injury attorney. You may be entitled to receive compensation for your injuries, but it can be difficult to collect the compensation you deserve. If the other party denied fault or the insurance only offered you a portion of the money to which you are entitled, an experienced lawyer can help you protect your rights.
Beginning Your Search
As you are searching for an Atlanta personal injury lawyer, carefully investigate and speak with several personal ...
Drug may help overwrite bad memories
2011-05-26
MONTREAL, March 26, 2011 – Recalling painful memories while under the influence of the drug metyrapone reduces the brain's ability to re-record the negative emotions associated with them, according to University of Montreal researchers at the Centre for Studies on Human Stress of Louis-H. Lafontaine Hospital. The team's study challenges the theory that memories cannot be modified once they are stored in the brain. "Metyrapone is a drug that significantly decreases the levels of cortisol, a stress hormone that is involved in memory recall," explained lead author Marie-France ...
NASA's Hubble finds rare 'blue straggler' stars in Milky Way's hub
2011-05-26
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has found a rare class of oddball stars called blue stragglers in the hub of our Milky Way, the first detected within our galaxy's bulge.
Blue stragglers are so named because they seemingly lag behind in the aging process, appearing younger than the population from which they formed. While they have been detected in many distant star clusters, and among nearby stars, they never have been seen inside the core of our galaxy.
It is not clear how blue stragglers form. A common theory is that they emerge from binary pairs. As the more massive ...
Latisse a Happy Accident for Allergan and Women With Inadequate Eyelashes
2011-05-26
Allergan seems to have a history of happy accidents.
The specialty pharmaceutical company came across the wrinkle-smoothing benefits of BOTOX while testing the compound as a treatment for eyelid spasms. Then it stumbled onto the eyelash-stimulating abilities of bimatoprost, a topical glaucoma medication that became the active ingredient in Latisse.
Latisse is currently the only FDA-approved treatment for eyelash hypotrichosis, abnormal or inadequate eyelash growth. Latisse is thought to work by increasing the number of eyelashes your eyelid can sprout and extending ...
Oncologists hold key to curbing cancer costs
2011-05-26
Richmond, Va. (May 25, 2011) – The cost of cancer care is threatening to bankrupt our healthcare system. New drugs are prolonging life, but at staggering costs. This coupled with aging baby boomers and an increasing population mean the U.S. will spend $173 billion annually on cancer care by the year 2020. This trend is not sustainable; however, there are evidence-based ways to maintain or improve the quality of care while saving money for the new therapies being discovered every day.
So argue VCU Massey Cancer Center researchers Thomas Smith, M.D., and Bruce E. Hillner, ...
New Jersey Agency Lax on Doctor Sanctions Following Malpractice
2011-05-26
New Jersey's State Board of Medical Examiners proclaims its mission as the protection of the public's health, safety and welfare. Functionally, that means providing licenses to medical professionals, adopting practice standards, looking into allegations of misconduct and, most important of all, meting out discipline to physicians who fail to provide competent, qualified and ethical service to patients.
But a report from the consumer watchdog group Public Citizen finds that the board failed to discipline 57 percent of licensed health professionals whose practice privileges ...
Not all citizens' votes created equal, and study says it shows in funding
2011-05-26
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — "One person, one vote" is often the rallying cry for democratic reform, suggesting everyone should get an equal say in their government.
Yet in some of the oldest and largest democracies, some votes are worth far more than others by design. A Wyoming voter, for instance, is significantly over-represented compared with a California voter. Each state has two U.S. senators, but California has 66 times more people.
How much does it matter? According to a recent study of decades of data, from the U.S. and eight other countries, it matters a lot when it ...
Dos and Don'ts Of Divorce When You Have a Toddler
2011-05-26
Young children cope with divorce differently than older children. Toddlers are just beginning to become facile with language and parents may not always know what they need. So, what are some basic rules that parents can follow to help toddlers transition from one home to two homes as painlessly as possible.
1. Do not trash talk your ex in front of your child.
Toddlers and preschoolers pick up on even the subtlest conflict between parents. When parents are living in the same home, it can be hard on a child. But when parents move into separate home, the child may internalize ...
New drug treatment extends lives of men with prostate cancer
2011-05-26
AURORA, Colo. (May 25, 2011) - A drug recently approved by the Food & Drug Administration for the treatment of prostate cancer is proving to give some patients the gift of time. A new study shows abiraterone acetate extends the lives of men with the most advanced form of the disease by about four months. The study in the May 26, 2011 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine was co-authored by Thomas W. Flaig, MD, medical oncologist at the University of Colorado Hospital's Tony Grampsas Urologic Oncology Clinic and assistant professor at the University of Colorado School ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Air pollution impacts an aging society
UC Davis researchers achieve total synthesis of ibogaine
Building better biomaterials for cancer treatments
Brain stimulation did not improve impaired motor skills after stroke
Some species of baleen whales avoid attracting killer whales by singing too low to be heard
Wasteful tests before surgery: Study shows how to reduce them safely
UCalgary researchers confirm best approach for stroke in medium-sized blood vessels
Nationwide, 34 local schools win NFL PLAY 60 grants to help students move more
New software developed at Wayne State University will help study chemical and biological systems
uOttawa study unveils new insights into how neural stem cells are activated in the adult human brain
Cystic fibrosis damages the immune system early on
Novel ‘living’ biomaterial aims to advance regenerative medicine
Warding off superbugs with a pinch of turmeric
Ophthalmic complications in patients on antidiabetic GLP-1 medications are concerning neuro-ophthalmologists
Physicians committee research policy director speaks today at hearing on taxpayer funded animal cruelty
New technology lights way for accelerating coral reef restoration
Electroencephalography may help guide treatments for language disorders
Multinational research project shows how life on Earth can be measured from space
Essential genome of malaria parasite Plasmodium knowlesi mapped
Ice streams move due to tiny ice quakes
Whale song has remarkable similarities to human speech in terms of efficiency
Uncovered: How mice override instinctive fear responses
A pathway that contributes to insulin resistance can be targeted, mouse study shows
Special Issue: The cryosphere
Scientists discover brain mechanism that helps overcome fear
Mantis shrimp clubs filter sound to mitigate damage
Large differences in water-seeking ability found in U.S. corn varieties
Whale song has structure similar to human language
Cracking the Burmese python code: New data zeroes in on game-changing strategies
Risk it or kick it? Study analyzes NFL coaches’ risk tolerance on fourth down
[Press-News.org] 'Guide vests' -- robotic navigation aids for the visually impairedUSC engineers are creating a high-tech aid for blind and partially blind people who have long depended on white canes as their only tool for getting around