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This forward would continue to kick off interest in science subjects.Read on
Harish Kotian



From: Mujtaba Merchant [mailto:mujta...@gmail.com]
Sent: 11 September 2013 07:29
To: Mujtaba Merchant
Subject: A Blind Researcher Takes Aim at the Future of Accessible Tech

Got this article from a blog shared by a friend that works with accessibility 
in my company. Worth the share and read!

A blind Ph.D. student studying computer science at North Carolina State 
University, Sina Bahram is doing innovative research to take human-computer 
interaction to the next level. He's working on an application for eyes-free 
exploration of graphical information that he hopes will change the way people 
interact with devices, and will facilitate collaboration between individuals 
with visual impairments, like himself, and their sighted peers. In a recent 
interview with us, Mr. Bahram shared details about his research, an insight 
into the exciting future of accessible technology, and a bit about his personal 
history with Learning Ally.

Bahram's interest in accessible technology has been piqued for as long as he 
can remember, even tracing back to when he was a young student trying to 
decipher how Learning Ally's audiobook cassette recordings provided tones for 
page and chapter indication. He used audiobooks extensively through middle 
school, taking a multisensory approach to reading science textbooks by reading 
braille and listening to the audio at the same time. Then throughout high 
school and undergraduate school, he incorporated increasingly sophisticated 
technologies into his toolbox. His interest in accessible tech and computers as 
an instrument for his personal success developed into a desire to research and 
design future generations of technology, which is exactly what he is working on 
now.

The system he's developing is called TIKISI, which stands for touch it, key it, 
speak it, referring to the fact that there are multiple ways of accessing the 
information, which is known as a multimodal interface. This means you're using 
different types of interactions-both touch and speech-to give and get 
information from the computer.

"This technology can obviously have a lot of benefit for someone who's blind," 
Bahram says. "But there's also the principle of universal design here. The 
application could be useful for anyone. Think about driving a car and not 
having to look at a touch screen in order to use it."

TIKISI has particular value to STEM subjects, which make frequent use of maps, 
charts, graphs, diagrams, and other visual representations of data, because it 
uses multi-modal interaction.

"One of the first applications of TIKISI is an overlay for Google Maps," Bahram 
explains. "I was tired of opening a map and hearing nothing from my screen 
reader. The TIKISI application registers where you're touching the map and 
reads back information. There are multiple overlays to switch between depending 
on what information you want to hear, for example, city names or coordinates. 
The screen is very sensitive, so you can get highly detailed feedback and use a 
variety of gestures to trigger different responses. There is also a 
user-controlled grid that can be dialed in or out to give more or less 
pinpointed information."


"It would be a big step forward if blind people no longer had to depend on 
niche products."

This level of interactivity has yet to be seen in mainstream devices. "Current 
accessible technologies have made a lot of progress in recent years, but 
haven't yet fully evolved for modern interfaces. For example, the screen-reader 
and related accessibility features built into Apple devices work great for text 
and standard user interface components but lack the ability to interactively 
navigate images. Incorporating more concepts from human-computer interaction 
research is the next logical step in the evolution of accessible tech." Working 
in the rapidly changing world of technology, part of Bahram's job is to 
anticipate what the next major developments and trends will be, and then to 
help implement them. He's optimistic about future technologies and their 
implications for the visually impaired. "In the next five years, I foresee an 
accelerated integration between our everyday lives and the technologies we use. 
If you go back, telephones used to be wired to the house; then they were mobile 
and you were able to carry them around, but they were still primarily 
telephones. Then when smartphones entered the market, we were able to take the 
internet with us. Now technology like Apple's SIRI is ubiquitous, where people 
can ask simple questions of their devices. It's not to the point where people 
can speak normally and conversationally with their devices, but this tech is 
improving. I think people are going to get more and more comfortable 
interacting with technology in a direct and personalized way."

Bahram also believes the paradigm of how and where we use computers will change.

"We're seeing the form factor of technology evolve. Currently, so much of our 
mobile human-computer interaction is centered around phones. Now things like 
Google Glass, a wearable computer with an optical head-mounted display, are 
being developed. Google Glass has great potential to help the blind population. 
I encourage Google and others to consider accessibility when making design and 
policy decisions in the future. This new wave of accessibility-aware mobile 
devices could easily help with real-time face detection, street level 
navigation, barcode scanning, and so much more. I think having your computer 
help you with things in the real world is going to be the main focus in tech 
over the next five years." As it continually advances, accessible technology 
can greatly help blind people secure employment and collaborate with their 
sighted peers.


"As more eyes-free, interactive technology is incorporated into mainstream 
devices, collaboration between individuals with visual impairments and their 
sighted peers will become a reality."

"Underemployment is a problem we've had for a while. Underrepresentation of 
blind people in the STEM fields, for example, is an issue that a lot of folks 
have been concentrating on. I'm hoping technology like TIKISI will help by 
bringing earlier access to blind kids, before they're turned off of math and 
science. Another aspect is interaction with technology. Currently, it's 
difficult for blind students and professionals to collaborate with their 
sighted peers, simply because they can't access tools and equipment in the same 
way. This is why, moving forward, it's important for mainstream devices to be 
accessible. If you can use the necessary tools, you're much more employable 
because there are not all of those immediate obstacles. So I would say the 
solution lies in education-that might be cliché, but there's 100 percent truth 
in it-accessible tools, and incorporating universal design into mainstream 
technology. It would be a big step forward if blind people no longer had to 
depend on niche products."As both a successful professional in a fast-paced 
tech field and a blind person, Bahram has some sound advice for young blind and 
visually impaired students who are interested in STEM careers.

"Go for it. A STEM career pays great, it's fun, it's exciting, and it is a huge 
space in which you get to compete on the merit of what you're able to do, 
rather than on what you're not able to do. We're moving towards this 
intellectual economy where it's going to matter more what you can do, and how 
you can use machines and technology, which is all in your brain."

Pertinent to both the classroom and the workplace, Bahram says, "Technology is 
a really good game leveler. In the digital world, there are always 
opportunities to make things accessible. As more eyes-free, interactive 
technology is incorporated into mainstream devices, collaboration between 
individuals with visual impairments and their sighted peers will become a much 
easier reality."

To contact or learn more about Sina and his research, visit his website at 
www.SinaBahram.com; read his blog at blog.SinaBahram.com; follow him on Twitter 
@SinaBahram, or email him at s...@sinabahram.com.

https://www.learningally.org/blind-researcher-helps-define-the-future-of-accessible-tech/

Mujtaba Merchant
Bangalore, India
"Motivation is what gets you started, habit is what keeps you going." ~ Jim Rohn

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