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Blind woman creates mobile app

JoanaSaraiva 于 2019-08-10 01:51 分享

About the solution

Chieko Asakawa was 14 when she became blind after an accident in a swimming pool. Since then she has innovated to help the visually impaired like her.

One of her innovations to help the blind is called NavCog. Working with IBM; she created a mobile application which is controlled by voice, and helps blind people navigate complicated indoor locations.

The app creates an indoor map through the use of Bluetooth beacons which are installed approximately every 10 meters. These beacons collect data and build the ‘fingerprints’ of the location. "We detect user position by comparing the users' current fingerprint to the server's fingerprint model," Asakawa explains. “Collecting large amounts of data creates a more detailed map than is available in an application like Google Maps, which doesn't work for indoor locations and cannot provide the level of detail blind and visually impaired people need.”

Christine Hunsinger, 70, and her husband Douglas Hunsinger, 65, both blind, said after trying the app "I felt more like I was in control of my own situation”, "it was really liberating to travel independently on my own”.

NavCog is currently available for free at the Apple Store.

Adapted from: https://bbc.in/2KqtoxX
More info: https://apple.co/2McIUj0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUucN_X7x24

这些解决方案不应包括使用药物,化学品或生物制品(包括食品);创伤性设备;冒犯性的,商业或内在危险的内容。该解决方案未经医学验证。请谨慎进行!如果您有任何疑问,请咨询健康专家。

DISCLAIMER: This story was written by someone who is not the author of the solution, therefore please be advised that, although it was written with the utmost respect for the innovation and the innovator, there can be some incorrect statements. If you find any errors please contact the patient Innovation team via info@patient-innovation.com

关于发明者

Chieko Asakawa, from Japan, who is blind since the age of 14, created NavCog, a mobile app to help the blind navigate indoors.

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