Blind can take wheel with new vehicle


> Mark Riccobono, executive director of the National Federation of the Blind’s
> Jernigan Institute, drives the Virginia Tech Blind Driver Challenge 
> vehicle
> through an obstacle course of traffic cones on a campus parking lot. In 
> the
> passenger seat is Greg Jannaman, who led the student team within the
> mechanical engineering department during the past year, and is monitoring
> the software of the vehicle. Credit: Steven Mackay, Virginia Tech
>
> A student team in the Virginia Tech College of Engineering is providing 
> the
> blind with an opportunity many never thought possible: The opportunity to
> drive.
>
> A retrofitted four-wheel dirt buggy developed by the Blind Driver 
> Challenge
> team (http://www.me.vt.edu/blinddriver/) from Virginia Tech's Robotics and
> Mechanisms Laboratory uses laser range finders, an instant voice command
> interface and a host of other innovative, cutting-edge technology to guide
> blind drivers as they steer, brake, and accelerate. Although in the early
> testing stage, the National Federation of the Blind -- which spurred the
> project -- considers the vehicle a major breakthrough for independent 
> living
> of the visually impaired.
>
> "It was great!" said Wes Majerus, of Baltimore, the first blind person to
> drive the buggy on a closed course at the Virginia Tech campus this 
> summer.
> Majerus is an access technology specialist with the National Federation of
> the Blind's Jernigan Institute in Baltimore, a research and training
> institute dedicated to developing technologies and services to help the
> blind achieve independence.
>
> Majerus called his drive a liberating experience, adding that he drove
> before on Nebraska farm roads with his father as a guide in the passenger
> seat.
>
> Sitting inside the vehicle, a blind driver can turn the steering wheel, 
> stop
> and accelerate by following data from a computing unit that uses sensory
> information from the laser range finder serving as the 'eyes' of the 
> driver,
> in addition to a combination of voice commands and a vibrating vest as
> guides. A member of the Virginia Tech student team sat next to Majerus in
> the passenger seat to monitor the system's software operations.
>
> "It's a great first step," Majerus added. "As far as the differences 
> between
> human instructions and those given by the voice in the Blind Driver
> Challenge car, the car's instructions are very precise. You use the
> technology to act on the environment -- the driving course -- in a very
> orderly manner. In some cases, the human passenger will be vague, "turn
> left" -- does that mean just a small turn to the left, or are we going for
> large amounts of turn?"
>
> Also driving the vehicle was Mark Riccobono, also of Baltimore, the
> executive director of the Jernigan Institute, who also is blind. He called
> his test drive historic. "This is sort of our going to the moon project," 
> he
> said
>
> In 2004 Jernigan Institute challenged university research teams to develop 
> a
> vehicle that would one day allow the blind to drive. Virginia Tech was the
> only university in the nation to accept the nonprofit's call two years
> later, said Dennis Hong, director of the Robotics and Mechanisms 
> Laboratory,
> part of the Virginia Tech mechanical engineering department. The National
> Federation of the Blind provided a $3,000 grant to launch the project.
>
> "I thought it would be a very rewarding project, helping the blind," said
> Hong, the current faculty adviser on the project. "We are not only excited
> about the vehicle itself, but more than that, we are excited about the
> potential of the many spin-off technologies from this project that can be
> used for helping the blind in so many ways."
>
> The team will bring the Blind Driver Challenge vehicle to the National
> Federation of the Blind's Youth Slam summer camp event held July 26 
> through
> Aug. 1 in College Park, Md. There, the team hopes to have teenagers who
> would be obtaining their driver's licenses, but cannot because of their
> blindness, drive the buggy.
>
> Wesley Majerus, an access technology specialist with the National 
> Federation
> of the Blind’s Jernigan Institute, finishes driving the Virginia Tech 
> Blind
> Driver Challenge vehicle around a roped-off driving course on a campus
> parking lot. The experience, he said, was liberating.
>
> Youth participants also are expected to remote control drive miniature 
> cars.
> Additionally, the car is expected to ride in a National Federation of the
> Blind-sponsored parade in Washington D.C.
>
> "I most look forward to learning as much as I can from these bright young
> students," said Greg Jannaman, who led the Virginia Tech student team in 
> his
> senior year and graduated in May with a bachelor's degree in mechanical
> engineering. "Blind students from across the nation apply to be selected 
> to
> attend this summer camp. While we are there to provide an educational
> experience for them, I can only imagine the invaluable feedback and fresh
> new ideas that they will provide in return."
>
> Jannaman is excited about the vehicle's success. "There wasn't a moment's
> hesitation with any of our blind drivers, whereas blind-folded sighted
> drivers weren't as quick to let go of their preconceptions," said Jannaman
> of Hendersonville, Tenn. "The blind drivers actually performed better than
> their sighted counterparts. An overwhelming sense of accomplishment 
> overcame
> me as I simply rode along while Wes and Mark successfully navigated the
> driving course without my assistance."
>
> Early models of the Blind Driver Challenge vehicle relied more on
> technologies for fully autonomous vehicles, previously developed by 
> Virginia
> Tech mechanical engineering students as part of the DARPA Urban Challenge.
> The student team redesigned the vehicle so that the blind motorist has
> complete control of the driving process, as any sighted driver would.
>
> This change in approach led to new challenges, including how to 
> effectively
> convey the high bandwidth of information from the laser sensors scanning 
> the
> vehicle's surrounding environment to the driver fast enough and accurate
> enough to allow safe driving. As a result, the team developed non-visual
> interface technologies, including a vibrating vest for feedback on speed, 
> a
> click counter steering wheel with audio cues, spoken commands for
> directional feedback, and a unique tactile map interface that utilizes
> compressed air to provide information about the road and obstacles
> surrounding the vehicle.
>
> Riccobono knows of mock ups and non-working "blind driver car" set-ups 
> from
> the past, but says this is the first working vehicle to put the blind and
> visually impaired in control of the steering wheel. "Blind people have
> brains, the capacity to make decisions," he said. "Blind people want to 
> live
> independent lives, why would they not want to drive?"
>
> Even once the technology is perfected, laws now barring the blind from
> driving and public perception must be changed, Riccobono said. "This is 
> the
> piece that we know will be the most difficult," said Riccobono, adding 
> that
> the car must be near-perfected before the National Federation of the Blind
> can truly push the car to law-makers and the general public. He said this
> effort will take millions of dollars in development.
>
> The 2009-10 student team already is planning major changes to the
> technology, including replacing the dirt buggy vehicle with a fully 
> electric
> car commonly used by traffic officers in downtown city centers. The
> all-electric vehicle would reduce the vibration which can cause problems 
> to
> the laser sensor, and it will provide clean electric power for the 
> computing
> units and that is better for the environment.
>
> Source: Virginia Tech (news : web)
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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