I found this article to be very interesting and wanted to share it with you.  
A haunting black-and-white video screened during the TED Fellows talks depicted 
people speaking into a device and then walking - at first taking halting steps, 
then more confident strides. As the video unfolds, the camera zooms in on the 
faces of the walkers - revealing that they are blind.
With his team, TED Senior Fellow Anthony Vipin Das, an eye surgeon, has been 
developing haptic shoes that use vibration and GPS technology to guide the 
blind. This innovation - which could radically change the lives of the 
vision-impaired - has drawn the interest of the United States Department of 
Defense, which has recently shortlisted the project for a $2 million research 
grant. Anthony tells us the story behind the shoe.

Tell us about the haptic shoe.

The shoe is called Le Chal, which means "take me there" in Hindi. My team, 
Anirudh Sharma and Krispian Lawrence and I, are working on a haptic shoe that 
uses GPS to guide the blind. The most difficult problems that the blind usually 
face when they navigate is orientation and direction, as well as obstacle 
detection. The shoe is in its initial phase of testing: We've crafted the 
technology down to an insole that can fit into any shoe and is not limited by 
the shape of the footwear, and it vibrates to guide the user. It's so intuitive 
that if I tap on your right shoulder, you will turn to your right; if I tap on 
your left shoulder, you turn to your left.

The shoe basically guides the user on the foot on which he's supposed to take a 
turn. This is for direction. The shoe also keeps vibrating if you're not 
oriented in the direction of your initial path, and will stop vibrating when 
you're headed in the right direction. It basically brings the wearer back on 
track as we check orientation at regular intervals. Currently I'm conducting 
the first clinical study at LV Prasad Eye Institute in Hyderabad, India. It's 
very encouraging to see the kind of response we've had from wearers. They were 
so moved because it was probably the very first time that they had the sense of 
independence to move confidently - that the shoe was talking to them, telling 
them where to go and what to do.

How do you tell the shoe where you want to go?

It uses GPS tracking, and we've put in smart taps: gestures that the shoe can 
learn. You tap twice, and it'll take you home. If you lift your heel for five 
seconds, the shoe might understand, "This is one of my favorite locations." And 
not just that. If a shoe detects a fall, it can automatically call an emergency 
number. Moving forward, we want to try to decrease the dependency on the phone 
and the network to a great extent. We hope to crowdsource maps and build up 
enough data to store on the shoe itself.

The second phase we are working on is obstacle detection. India has got such a 
varied terrain. The shoe can detect immediate obstacles like stones, potholes, 
steps. It's not a replacement for the cane, but it's an additive benefit for a 
visually impaired person to offer a sense of direction and orientation.

Are you still in the development stage?

The insole is already done. We are currently testing it. I'm using simple and 
complex paths - simple paths like a square, rectangle, triangle and a circle, 
and complex paths include a zigzag or a random path. Then we are going to step 
it up with navigation into a neighborhood. From there we'll develop navigation 
to distant locations, including the use of public transportation. It will be a 
stepwise study that we'll finish over the middle of this year, then go in for 
manufacturing the product.

You're an eye doctor. How did you get involved in this?

I'm an eye surgeon who loves to step out of my box and try to see others who 
are working in similar areas of technology that are helpful for my patients. So 
Anirudh Sharma and I, we're on the same TR35 list of India in 2012. I said, 
"Dude, I think we can be doing stuff with the shoe and my patients. Let's see 
how we can refine it." There was already an initial prototype when he presented 
last year at EmTech in Bangalore. Anirudh teamed up with one of his friends, 
Krispian Lawrence of Ducere Technologies in Hyderabad, who is leading the 
development and logistics to get this into the market. We just formed a really 
cool team, and started working on the shoe, started testing it on our patients 
and refining the model further and further. Finally we've come to a stage where 
my patients are walking and building a bond with the shoe.

Are these patients comfortable with the shoe?

Yes, it's totally unobtrusive. And more importantly, we are working on 
developing the first vibration language in the world for the Haptic Shoe. We're 
looking at standardizing the vibration, like Braille, which is multilingual. 
But even more crucial than the technology, the shoe is basically talking to the 
walker. How they can trust the shoe? So that's an angle that we are looking at. 
Because at the end of the day, it's the shoe that's guiding you to the 
destination. We're trying to build that bond between the walker and the sole.

Building a bond with the sole. That's good. I'm going to use that.





Valerie Duffy, MSW

Visual Impairment Coordinator

Phone:  208-422-1228

"We are visitors on this planet. We are here for 90 or 100 years at the very 
most. During that period, we must try to do something good, something useful, 
with our lives. If you contribute to other people's happiness, you will find 
the true goal, the true meaning of life." ~ HH, the 14th Dalai Lama






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