Friday, November 29, 2013

Georgia Tech's Tongue Drive wheelchair proves quicker than traditional breath controls




Engadget RSS Feed





Georgia Tech's Tongue Drive wheelchair proves quicker than traditional breath controls



Georgia Tech tongue-controlled wheelchair



Georgia Tech researchers believed that tongue-controlled devices could help the disabled, and now they have solid proof. A new study shows that the school's wearable Tongue Drive System lets the paralyzed control wheelchairs three times faster than they would using an ordinary breath-based approach. The speediness is due to TDS' intuitive design, Georgia Tech says -- wearers use a magnetic piercing in their tongue as a joystick, which is both faster and more logical than puffing into a straw. It's subtler, too, as wearers don't block their faces with as much equipment. Trials have so far been limited to hospitals and labs, but the findings pave the way for real-world tests. Eventually, Georgia Tech hopes for widespread use that improves tetraplegics' mobility -- and gives them more control over their lives.


Filed under: , ,


Comments


The Verge

Source: Georgia Tech








No comments:

Post a Comment