Friday, November 29, 2013

Georgia Tech's tongue-driven wheelchair outruns conventional rivals (video)




Engadget RSS Feed





Georgia Tech's tongue-driven wheelchair outruns conventional rivals (video)



Georgia Tech tongue-controlled wheelchair



Georgia Tech has long wanted to show that tongue-controlled devices could help the disabled, and it now has 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