Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
International

13-Year-Old Indian-American Boy Raghav Ganesh Wins $5,000 Award For Device To Help Blind

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 May, 2015 10:44 PM
    Raghav Ganesh, a 13-year-old Indian-American seventh-grader has won a $5,000 award and named one of America's top 10 youth volunteers of 2015 for designing and building a device to help visually impaired people.
     
    The device built by Ganesh of San Jose, California uses sensors to detect objects beyond the reach of the white canes used by many blind people.
     
    He was one of 10 young Americans selected in the 2015 Prudential Spirit of Community Awards programme for national recognition based on their outstanding achievements in community service.
     
    Selected from a field of more than 33,000 youth volunteers, Ganesh also gets an engraved gold medallion, a crystal trophy for his school, and a $5,000 grant from The Prudential Foundation for a non-profit charitable organisation of his choice.
     
    Raghav got the idea after watching a video about the challenges faced by those with limited or no eyesight.
     
    "I saw how, despite being used for several centuries, the white cane does not provide users enough information about their environment," he said.
     
    "I also saw why many high-tech alternatives are not meeting the needs of visually challenged folks."
     
    Because he enjoys science and electronics, and has become familiar with sensors and motors through a toy-building hobby, Raghav decided to see if he could design something better.
     
    He built a small prototype and entered it in a local science fair. He then sought advice from the head of a local blind center, and over the next several months made five major revisions based on feedback from blind centre staff and actual cane users.
     
    He ended up with a device that clamps onto the cane, uses ultrasonic and infrared sensors to detect obstacles more than six feet (1.8 metres) beyond the end of the cane, and communicates this information to the user through vibrations in the cane's handle.
     
    Raghav secured a grant to make multiple copies, and hopes to create an open patent so that organisations for the blind around the world can make the device for their clients.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    US Lawmakers Move To Speed Up Visa Approvals For Indian Doctors

    US Lawmakers Move To Speed Up Visa Approvals For Indian Doctors
    Citing a shortage of physicians in the US, two lawmakers have introduced a bipartisan legislation to speed-up visa approval for Indian and Pakistani doctors slated to work at US hospitals.

    US Lawmakers Move To Speed Up Visa Approvals For Indian Doctors

    Over 1,800 Dead in Nepal Earthquake; Fresh Tremors Rock Delhi, Northern India

    Over 1,800 Dead in Nepal Earthquake; Fresh Tremors Rock Delhi, Northern India
    An Indian meteorological official said here the epicentre of the fresh tremors also lay in Nepal, where a powerful earthquake on Saturday killed nearly 2,000 people.

    Over 1,800 Dead in Nepal Earthquake; Fresh Tremors Rock Delhi, Northern India

    155 Killed As 7.9 Earthquake Rocks Nepal, Shakes India

    155 Killed As 7.9 Earthquake Rocks Nepal, Shakes India
    At least 155 people were killed and many were left bloodied when a massive earthquake shook Nepal and India, causing widespread devastation. Buildings collapsed, roads cracked and phone lines snapped as the earth trembled.

    155 Killed As 7.9 Earthquake Rocks Nepal, Shakes India

    Islamic State Kills 10 People, Shoots Down Plane In Syria

    Islamic State Kills 10 People, Shoots Down Plane In Syria
    Islamic State (IS) militants killed 10 people, many of them Kurds, in northern Syria on Friday and shot down a military aircraft in the south of the country, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, or SOHR, reported.

    Islamic State Kills 10 People, Shoots Down Plane In Syria

    P.E.I. Doctor Rescues Disabled Man Who Fell Onto Subway Tracks In Washington

    P.E.I. Doctor Rescues Disabled Man Who Fell Onto Subway Tracks In Washington
    A Charlottetown doctor says he didn't hesitate because there was no time to waste when he jumped from a subway platform in Washington, D.C., earlier this week to rescue a disabled man whose wheelchair had toppled onto the tracks.

    P.E.I. Doctor Rescues Disabled Man Who Fell Onto Subway Tracks In Washington

    'America's Doctor' Vivek Murthy Recounts 'Improbable Rise'

    'America's Doctor' Vivek Murthy Recounts 'Improbable Rise'
    Son of Indian immigrant parents, Dr. Vivek Murthy says his rise to the position of "America's Doctor" was improbable but he got where he was by standing on principle.

    'America's Doctor' Vivek Murthy Recounts 'Improbable Rise'