BANGALORE, September 17, 2011
Lending them a voice
Deepa Kurup

In his Geography class, Mukul's teacher quizzes him about Australia.
Aided by his Tablet device, Mukul, who studies in Class VII at the
Spastics Society of Karnataka, is able to communicate that he thinks
people migrate to Australia in search of “jobs” despite the “hot
weather”.

Being speech-impaired, young Mukul taps these words onto his smart,
touch-screen device that uses a speech synthesiser to read out his
sentences.

The gadget he uses is Avaz, an Augmentative and Alternative
Communication (AAC) device created by Ajit Narayanan, who heads
Invention Labs, a start-up incubated at the Indian Institute of
Technology, Chennai. Last week, Mr. Narayanan was named in the MIT
Technology Reviews' list of 35 Young Innovators for 2011 for creating
‘affordable speech synthesisers'.

AAC devices, which have been widely used in developed countries for
some time now — most prominently by scientist Stephen Hawking — cost
anywhere between $ 5,000 and $ 10,000 (roughly Rs. 2.5 lakh to Rs. 5
lakh). In comparison, Avaz costs Rs. 30,000. This is Avaz's most
significant achievement, points out Mr. Narayanan. Fuelled by an ARM
processor, Avaz's operation system is built on an Android platform.

The 30-year-old innovator explains to The Hindu that his
accomplishments are only partly technological, and have more to do
with entrepreneurship. “We were able to take timely advantage of the
market when components of smartphones and tablet computers became
relatively cheap. What is most important is that we were able to take
this product out of the lab and make it available in the market.”

While he believes there is innovation in India, he feels the research
here “often operates in a vacuum or in a hypothetical way where we
believe that the technology itself will solve the problem”. This needs
to change, he says.

Mr. Narayanan, an IIT-Chennai alumnus, returned from the US. in 2007
wanting to invent something “socially relevant”.

On a visit to the Spastics Society in Chennai, he stumbled upon a
problem that was as “right here, right now” as it gets. “There were
children who were intelligent and sensitive, but could not
communicate, and I knew that I wanted to make their lives better,” he
said.

Today, the device speaks in six languages — Kannada, Tamil, Telugu,
Malayalam, Marathi and Hindi. Besides allowing users to key in words,
it also has readymade templates stored for frequently used sentences,
words and syntax, that it strings together to read out a sentence.
Currently, around 60 devices have been sold mostly to special schools.

“I want to make sure that every child in India who needs the device
has access to it,” says Mr. Narayanan. It's a tall task, he admits,
but is one that's achievable by walking that extra mile, source
sponsorships or make it part of Corporate Social Responsibility
projects. He also hopes that over time his team can take Avaz beyond
its current mandate, that is include various interventions to assist
people with different kinds of handicaps.

In Bangalore, Avaz is used by students in Spastics Society of
Karnataka in Indiranagar, Academy for Severely Handicapped and Autism
(ASHA) in Basaveshwaranagar, Fame India in Jayanagar and Deepika
Integrated Special School.

Comments to : [email protected]   Copyright © 2011, The Hindu

Register for AccessIndia convention 2011 at:
http://www.accessindia.org.in/harish/convention.htm

Search for old postings at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

To unsubscribe send a message to
[email protected]
with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in

Reply via email to