Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Two Indians MIT Researchers' Chip Powers Wearable Device To Guide Visually-Impaired

Darpan News Desk IANS, 05 Feb, 2016 12:31 PM
    Researchers, including two Indians, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have developed a low-power chip that could help visually-impaired people navigate their environments.
     
    The chip processes 3-D camera data consuming only one-thousandth as much power as a conventional computer processor executing the same algorithms and powers a prototype of a complete navigation system about the size of a binoculars case that can be worn around the neck. 
     
    A mechanical Braille interface developed at MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) conveys to the user information about the distance to the nearest obstacle in the direction the user is moving.
     
    "There was some prior work on this type of system, but the problem was that the systems were too bulky," said first author Dongsuk Jeon, a researcher at MIT's Microsystems Research Laboratories (MTL) when the navigation system was developed. He has now joined the faculty of Seoul National University in South Korea. 
     
    Jeon's team included professor of electrical engineering and computer science Anantha Chandrakasan, graduate student Priyanka Raina, professor of electrical engineering and computer science Daniela Rus, former research scientist at MTL Nathan Ickes and CSAIL researcher Hsueh-Cheng Wang. 
     
    Although the prototype navigation system is less obtrusive than its predecessors, it should be possible to miniaturise it even further, according to the researchers. 
     
    The new chip and the prototype navigation system was reported in a paper presented at the International Solid-State Circuits Conference held from January 31 to February 4 in San Francisco.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Turn Your Skin Into A Smartphone Display

    Turn Your Skin Into A Smartphone Display
     A wearable device that projects the image of a Android tablet on your skin will be a reality soon. Once worn on your wrist, a small light beam on the device, known as the Cicret Bracelet, would project your Android homepage right on your forearm.

    Turn Your Skin Into A Smartphone Display

    Facebook Adopts Worker-friendly Management Technique

    Facebook Adopts Worker-friendly Management Technique
    To effectively shape its overwhelmingly young work force into future leaders, the social networking site Facebook has adopted a set of somewhat unconventional management techniques.

    Facebook Adopts Worker-friendly Management Technique

    Sony Playstation And Xbox Networks Still Recovering From Christmas Disruption

    Sony Playstation And Xbox Networks Still Recovering From Christmas Disruption
    Sony's PlayStation network remained offline Friday on the second day of an outage that began roiling the online world just as eager video game players were unwrapping new consoles on Christmas morning.

    Sony Playstation And Xbox Networks Still Recovering From Christmas Disruption

    iphone To Help You Track Your Tweets

    iphone To Help You Track Your Tweets
    A new feature in Twitter's iPhone app can find how many people are reading your tweets, retweeting or clicking on a link you posted.

    iphone To Help You Track Your Tweets

    New device to precisely assemble whole organs

    New device to precisely assemble whole organs
    A new tissue building device shows promise of manufacturing human organs such as livers, kidneys or pancreas for anyone who needs a replacement....

    New device to precisely assemble whole organs

    Tech trends for 2015: virtual reality, wearables, streaming video

    Tech trends for 2015: virtual reality, wearables, streaming video
    TORONTO — Will 2015 be the year that virtual reality goes from sci-fi fantasy to real world play thing?

    Tech trends for 2015: virtual reality, wearables, streaming video