Source:

http://www.technologyreview.com/news/542426/fitness-technology-that-helps-th
e-blind-get-moving/?utm_campaign=newsletters&utm_source=newsletter-weekly-mo
bile&utm_medium=email&utm_content=20151019

 

New Assistive Technologies Help the Blind Get Active | MIT Technology Review

 

 

Fitness Technology That Helps the Blind Get Moving

 

A drone that guides blind runners around a track is just one of several new
fitness technologies designed to assist the visually impaired. 

By Christina Couch on October 16, 2015 

 

Why It Matters

 

Half of all disabled adults in the U.S. are obese.

 

While NASA is working to make drones quieter, one researcher at the
University of Nevada, Reno, is using its noise to benefit blind athletes.

 

Eelke Folmer, an associate professor of computer science and the head of
UNR's Human Plus Lab, has built a prototype drone system that guides blind
runners around a track, allowing them to exercise independently without a
sighted guide. Equipped with two cameras-a downward-facing one that follows
the lines on a track and a separate camera that focuses on a marker on the
runner's shirt-Folmer's quadcopter flies at eye level, about 10 feet ahead
of a runner, guiding them by sound. If the runner speeds up or slows down,
the drone adjusts its own speed.

 

Folmer says he hasn't been able to test it outdoors yet because the
university is so close to the Reno airport it is subject to FAA regulations
on drones. He is currently seeking permission from the airport's radio tower
to override this rule. "We've done some very simple trials inside just
following a straight line and it seemed to work," Folmer says. "I'm not sure
how it's going to be on a real oval where you also have to go through a
turn."

Researcher Eelke Folmer used this drone with a foam hull for the project to
prevent damage or injury if someone were to run into it.

Assistive devices for navigation and communication abound, but relatively
few technologies aim to help the visually impaired tackle fitness and
obesity, the latter of which disproportionately impacts the disabled
community. About one in three able-bodied adults in the U.S. are considered
obese or extremely obese according to research published in the American
Journal of Preventive Medicine, but among disabled adults, that rate rises
to one in two. For those with mobility, navigation, or vision impairments,
doing vigorous activities-the kind that actually burn calories and build
muscle-can be tough.

 

Another of Folmer's projects focuses specifically on increasing
accessibility to moderate and vigorous exercise. VI Fit is a series of
video-less video games created for blind children, though able-bodied users
can play along. Developed for the PC platform, each of the three fitness
games in the VI Fit series uses a Nintendo Wii controller to track motion,
and guides players through bowling, tennis, or whack-a-mole style play using
audio and tactile cues. The games are free and two use open-source code,
allowing developers to tweak the games as they see fit or create new ones.

 

"Most of the accessibility research [for the blind] focuses more on things
like screen readers and making the Web more accessible," Folmer says. "The
community of blind people still has major problems pertaining to health,
socialization, and quality of life. It would be more helpful for this
demographic if we research how technology can improve these issues."

 

 

A few other projects also aim to make it easier for blind people to get fit.
Kyle Rector, a graduate computer science and engineering student at the
University of Washington, is the creator of Eyes-Free Yoga, a system that
uses a Microsoft Kinect to guide visually impaired users through yoga
workouts. For standing poses, users get step-by-step verbal instructions and
real-time feedback on how they can adjust their bodies for proper form. For
sitting or lying poses-positions that are more difficult for the Kinect's
computer vision system to follow-users rely on audio instructions only.

 

"My system isn't necessarily intended to be used as the only exercise tool
for the rest of their lives, but it is a way to kind of propel [blind users]
to do more activity," Rector says, adding that in testing, several users
expressed interest in adding different exercise regimens since beginning
Eyes-Free Yoga. "They use it as a starting point."

 

Regards,

 

Shiv



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