60 likes | 168 Views
ICTs for those with multiple or cognitive disabilities. Dr. Arun Mehta President, Bidirectional Access Promotion Society, bapsi.org. The special problems of the deaf-blind.
E N D
ICTs for those with multiple or cognitive disabilities Dr. Arun Mehta President, Bidirectional Access Promotion Society, bapsi.org
The special problems of the deaf-blind • Often not even separately counted during a census, but in India alone, almost half a million deaf-blind children estimated • Neither does technology for the blind work for them, nor does that for the deaf • The only way for a deaf-blind person to use a computer or the Internet was to use a refreshable Braille device costing thousands of Dollars • Relatively little material is available in Braille, particularly in poor countries and rural areas • Both in blindness and deafness, there are varieties and grades: multiply the two, and you get very large variety in deaf-blindness. Hard to find optimal technological solutions
Bapsi's innovations for the deaf-blind • PocketSMS is a free app for smart phones that allows a deaf-blind person to receive and send text messages • Incoming messages are communicated to the user via vibration in Morse code (170 year old technology). • The user can type a reply using a QWERTY keyboard if one available, or use gesture-recognition (e.g. Graffiti) • We developed a Morse trainer as well • Mail, Wikipedia, Twitter, as well as access to text-to-speech and speech-to-text in the pipeline • Coded by a student (Anmol Anand) under summer training • http://www.bapsi.org/Home/pocketsms-for-android for more
Problems relating to cognitive disabilities, and Bapsi's approach • the variety of disabilities, their combinations and varying severities indicate that we need different software, content too, for each child • also, the software must grow with the child, and be able to handle multiple languages • It must be able to do all the different things people do with computers • Our free cloud-based Skid platform (skid.org.in) tries to scratch the surface here • Exploring singing and other artisitic skills, to open new channels of communication
Tech industry and cognitive disabilities • Employees of tech companies are several times more likely to be autistic as compared to general population • Because there is a likely genetic component in autism, the problem is even more severe in the next generation • ASD Levels in Eindhoven (tech hub):229/10000; Haarlem 84, Utrecht 57 per 10000 among children aged 4 to 16 • Persons with cognitive disabilities typically find it much easier to communicate through computers than face-to-face • In other words, the tech industry should be dealing with this problem at 3 levels: their own employees, their children, and also the technology they make, which is often the primary means of communication for those with such disabilities • Most companies pay little to no attention to these problems
“Internet access as basic human right:" Excellent initiative, but… • With existing technology, Internet access is impossible for those who aren't rich but have severe disabilities, for whom tech development must be a priority, free and open source! • Technology customization for each individual essential, but this may be impractical given hourly rates in the developed world. The manpower and cost-structure of developing countries makes this approach possible, giving us the potential to unlock some brilliant minds • Education needs to move away from trying to teach the student everything, to teaching her only essential skills, including one that affords her employment and self-respect • Better filters needed to reduce web pages to only the essential information