Penn Students Use XBox Kinect To Create Device For Visually Impaired
Two computer science students from the University of Pennsylvania, Eric Berdinis and Jeff Kiske, have hacked together a very impressive tactile feedback system for the visually impaired using a Microsoft Kinect device and a number of vibration actuators. The Kinecthesia is a belt worn camera system that detects the location and depth of objects in front of the wearer using depth information detected by the Kinect sensor. This information is processed on a BeagleBoard open computer platform and then used to drive six vibration motors located to the left, center and right of the user. The video below shows a demo of the system in use and gives a quick explanation of its operation.
The students came up with the idea for the Kinecthesia when they were asked to develop a medical device for their embedded systems class.
To date the project has been well received at Google’s Zeitgeist Young Minds conference and is gaining a quite a bit of interest.
The inventors are planning to refine the hardware and carry out end-user testing on the visually impaired community in the coming months. We’re interested in knowing whether the ticklish blind will have a more exciting time using the system.
*This blog post was originally published at Medgadget*
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