Interesting MIT contest ...

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Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2017 16:57:36 +0000
From: Kelly Gasque via leadership <[email protected]>
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Subject: [leadership] Article: This Device Translates Text to Braille in Real
    Time

This Device Translates Text to Braille in Real Time
Team Tactile hopes to create an inexpensive and portable device that can raise 
text right off the page
Read more: 
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/device-translates-text-braille-real-time-180963171/#uTBjzwM5T4lKw4Kx.99
In the wee hours of Valentine's day last year, a team of six women, all MIT 
engineering undergraduates, sat exhausted but exhilarated. Their table strewn 
with colorful wires, post it notes, food wrappers, scraps of papers, shapes cut 
from cardboard. This was no craft project gone awry. The team had just competed 
in MakeMIT’s hackathon—a competition in which teams of students spend 15 hours 
designing, coding, constructing, testing and debugging ambitious projects.
The women, competing under the team name 100% Enthusiasm, had set out to tackle a big 
challenge: accessibility for the blind. Their idea: a portable, inexpensive device 
that could scan text and convert it to braille in real time. It was something with 
potential to transform the lives of some of the 1.3 million 
Americans<https://nfb.org/images/nfb/documents/pdf/braille_literacy_report_web.pdf>
 who are legally blind.
This first iteration was rough. Nearly the size of an adult’s hand, the 
mechanics of the device were sandwiched between two panes of plastic—wires and 
circuit boards exposed. Six pins poked up through the top of the device to 
display a single braille character (letter, number or punctuation mark). It 
imaged each character of text using an external computer’s webcam, rather than 
an internal camera as the team had hoped, explains Chen “Bonnie” Wang, one of 
the team members who is currently a senior majoring in material science and 
engineering. It was slow and not particularly portable. But it worked, 
translating text to braille. Team 100% Enthusiasm won.
The win was just the beginning of their work with the device, which they dubbed 
Tactile. Now, many prototypes later, the team has received another accolade. Tactile 
is one of nine winners for this year’s Lemelson-MIT Student 
Prize<http://lemelson.mit.edu/winners_circle>, which celebrates the translation 
of “ideas into inventions that improve the world in which we live,” according to the 
contest’s website. The winning inventions—a folding electric drone, proteins to fight 
superbugs, and a solar-powered desalination system for off-grid water production, to 
name a few—tackle a wide range of problems.
“We were super honored to be chosen as one of the winners of the award,” says 
Wang. The title came with a $10,000 prize that they are hoping to put back into 
the project to continue to improve how the device works.
The team’s latest prototype, about the size of a candy bar, can display six 
characters at a time (the average English word is roughly five 
characters<http://norvig.com/mayzner.html> long) and has a built in camera. 
Users can place it down on a line of text and with a push of a button, the device 
takes an image. Optical character recognition then takes over, identifying the 
characters on the page using Microsoft’s Computer Vision API. Then the team’s 
software translates each character into braille and subsequently triggers the 
mechanical system in the box to raise and lower the pins. They have applied for a 
patent for the integration of the system through Microsoft’s #MakeWhatsNext patent 
program, which supports women inventors.
“Currently the camera only takes a picture of its field of view,” Chandani 
Doshi, one of the team members who is majoring in electrical engineering and 
computer science, explains via email. “We are aiming to make the device similar 
to a handheld scanner that allows the user to scan the entire page in one go.” 
The idea is to make it as easy as possible to operate, preventing the user from 
needing to keep track of where they are on the page.
Though this is not the first real-time text to braille device, most products are 
based on digital text, like ebooks or pdfs—and they are extremely expensive. For 
example, the HumanWare 
Brailliant<http://humanware.com/en-usa/products/blindness/braille_displays> can 
connect to mobile devices and computers, allowing the user to type on the six-keyed 
braille keyboard and read using the one-line display of 32 characters. Prices for the 
device start at over $2,500. Also popular are what’s known as braille note-takers. 
These are like mini-computers, allowing word processing, the use of excel and 
powerpoint, and internet browsing. But these, too, retail in the thousands.
And a lot of text is not readily available in electronic format—menus, 
brochures, receipts, business cards, class handouts and more. Tactile would 
raise the text of these inaccessible documents right off the page. The team 
hopes to eventually sell the device for a maximum cost of $200.
One of the many challenges in development, however, is figuring out a better 
way to raise and lower the pins. In similar devices on the market, this has 
long been done using piezoelectronics—an expensive method that harnesses the 
properties of crystal structures. The team hopes to use microfluidics 
(differences in either liquid or air pressure) or electromagnetism 
(interactions of electric currents and magnetic fields) to move the pins. They 
are now testing both systems to figure out which is the least expensive, but 
most responsive and shrinkable for their final prototype.
Ultimately the team hopes that the final product will be slightly smaller than 
their current prototype and display two lines of 18 characters each. They hope 
to get it to market within two years.
“This opens up the world, really. What limitation is there if you have a device that 
would transcribe any document into braille?” the team’s adviser Paul Parravano, who 
has been visually impaired since he was three, inquires in a 
video<https://youtu.be/csabnu58EEU?list=PLxd0bZ1RXEztKMidgK9lrZ5sSIJDtaxwI> 
about the device. “Suddenly the library is open.”
The question, however, is how many people will be waiting and ready to read the library. A 
commonly cited statistic is that less than 10 
percent<https://nfb.org/images/nfb/documents/pdf/braille_literacy_report_web.pdf> of 
people who are legally blind can actually read braille. Many people prefer to use 
text-to-speech technology and other audio-based programs, says Marion 
Hersh<http://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/engineering/staff/marionhersh/>, a researcher who 
specializes in assistive technology at the University of Glasgow. Braille is challenging to 
learn and given the option, she says, many instead choose audio or even magnification (if 
they have limited eyesight).
It is important to note, however, that the braille literacy numbers are based 
on an outdated mode of measurement: supply of braille books from American 
Printing House for the Blind, explains Ike Presley, National Project Manager 
for the American Foundation for the Blind. “We definitely want to stifle that 
misconception that braille is dead and technology is putting braille out of 
business,” he says. “If anything, technology is making braille more accessible.”
The women of team Tactile are well aware of the statistic, but believe that 
part of the problem is the lack of inexpensive devices to make braille more 
available. The market for such devices is small, so few companies venture in 
with innovative ideas. “We don't have a Microsoft or an Apple ... the tech 
companies that make the tools for people who are blind or visually impaired are 
relatively small,” says Presley.
This means less competition, less innovation and higher prices. “It really 
drives up the cost, which limits access to braille even more. It's just a bad 
cycle,” says Wang.
“Whether this could encourage people who don’t already know braille to use it 
is open to questions,” says Hersh. But she notes that any new accessibility 
technology that combines low cost with ease of use could be extremely helpful 
in the market.
Learning braille means literacy for the blind community, says Presley, who 
helps train service providers so they can more effectively work with the 
visually impaired. Audio systems don’t provide the same understanding of 
language. “Auditory is great...but it doesn’t give you the literacy,” he says. 
“When you listen to [text read aloud], you don't know how to spell the words, 
you don't see the grammar, you don't see how text is formatted ...But when you 
read it in braille, you do.”
Studies also 
suggest<https://nfb.org/images/nfb/publications/jbir/jbir15/jbir050202.html> 
that braille literacy increases both likelihood of being employed and an overall 
higher earnings potential for the blind and visually impaired—a group that has 
historically suffered high rates of unemployment.
These factors have only made team Tactile more determined to keep working on 
their product. All six engineers will graduate this June. But that isn’t going 
to slow them down. Three plan to continue working on Tactile, says Wang, and 
the others will continue part time.
“These women are on a great path, and as young as they are, if they can devote 
the next 20 years of their career to this, wow,” says Presley. “There's no 
telling what they might come up with.”





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ATI (Adaptive Technology Inc.)
A special interest affiliate of the Missouri Council of the Blind
http://moblind.org/membership/affiliates/adaptive_technology

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