From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Assistive technology (AT) is a generic term
that includes assistive, adaptive, and rehabilitative devices for
people with
disabilities and includes the process used in selecting,
locating, and using them.
The Technology-Related Assistance for Individuals with
Disabilities Act of 1988 (US Public Law 100-407) states that it is
"technology designed to be utilized in an assistive technology
device or assistive technology service."
AT promotes greater independence by enabling people to perform
tasks that they were formerly unable to accomplish, or had great
difficulty accomplishing, by providing enhancements to or changed
methods of interacting with the technology needed to accomplish such
tasks.
Likewise, disability advocates point out that technology is
often created without regard to people with disabilities, creating
unnecessary barriers to hundreds of millions of people.
Assistive
technology and universal accessibility
Universal (or broadened) accessibility, or universal
design means greater usability, particularly for people with
disabilities.
Universally accessible technology yields great rewards to the
typical user as well; good accessible design is universal
design. One example is the "curb cuts" (or dropped curbs) in the sidewalk
at street crossings. While these curb cuts enable pedestrians with
mobility impairments to cross the street, they also aid parents
with carriages and strollers, shoppers with carts, and travellers
and workers with pull-type bags.
As an example, the modern telephone is inaccessible to people who are
deaf or hard of hearing. Combined with a text telephone (also known as a TDD Telecommunications
device for the deaf and in the USA generally called a
TTY[TeleTYpewriter]), which converts typed characters into tones
that may be sent over the telephone line, a deaf person is able to
communicate immediately at a distance. Together with "relay"
services, in which an operator reads what the deaf person types and
types what a hearing person says, the deaf person is then given
access to everyone's telephone, not just those of people who
possess text telephones. Many telephones now have volume controls,
which are primarily intended for the benefit of people who are hard
of hearing, but can be useful for all users at times and places
where there is significant background noise. Some have larger keys
well-spaced to facilitate accurate dialing.
Also, a person with a mobility impairment can have difficulty
using calculators. Speech
recognition software recognizes short commands and makes use of
calculators easier.
People with learning
disabilities like dyslexia or dysgraphia are using text-to-speech (TTS) software for reading
and spelling programs for
assistance in writing texts.
Computers with their peripheral devices, editing, spellchecking and speech
synthesis software are becoming the core-stones of the
assistive technologies coming for relief to the people with learning disabilities and to the people
with visual impairments. The assisting spelling
programs and voice facilities are bringing better and more
convenient text reading and writing experience to the general
public.
Toys which have been adapted to be used by children with
disabilities may have advantages for non-disabled children as well.
The Lekotek movement assists
parents by lending assistive technology toys and expertise to
families.
The following professionals may be certified by RESNA
(RESNA.org) to serve the assistive technology needs of individuals:
occupational therapists, physical therapists, speech language
pathologists/audiologists, orthotists and prosthetists, educators,
and a variety of other rehabilitation and health professionals.
Assistive technology
products
Personal Emergency
Response Systems
Personal Emergency Response Systems (PERS), or Telecare (UK term), are a
particular sort of assistive technology that use electronic sensors
connected to an alarm system to help caregivers manage risk and
help vulnerable people stay independent at home longer. An example
would be the systems being put in place for senior people such as
fall detectors, thermometers (for hypothermia risk), flooding and unlit gas
sensors (for people with mild dementia). Notably, these alerts can be
customized to the particular person's risks. When the alert is
triggered, a message is sent to a carer or contact centre who can
respond appropriately.
Technology similar to PERS can also be used to act within a
person's home rather than just to respond to a detected crisis.
Using one of the examples above, gas sensors for people with
dementia can be used to trigger a device that turns off the gas and
tells someone what has happened.
Designing for people with dementia is a good example of how the
design of the interface of a piece of AT is critical to its
usefulness. People with dementia or any other identified user group
must be involved in the design process to make sure that the design
is accessible and usable. In the example above, a voice message
could be used to remind the person with dementia to turn off the
gas himself, but whose voice should be used, and what should the
message say? Questions like these must be answered through user
consultation, involvement and evaluation.
Accessible computer
input
Sitting at a desk with a QWERTY keyboard and a mouse remains the
dominant way of interacting with a personal computer. Some
Assistive Technology reduces the strain of this way of work through
ergonomic accessories
with height-adjustable furniture, footrests, wrist rests, and arm
supports to ensure correct posture. Keyguards fit over the keyboard
to help prevent unintentional keypresses.
Alternatively, Assistive Technology may attempt to improve the
ergonomics of the devices themselves:
- Ergonomic keyboards reduce the discomfort and strain of
typing.
- Chorded
keyboards have a handful of keys (one per digit per hand) to
type by 'chords' which produce different letters and keys.
- Expanded keyboards with larger, more widely-spaced keys.
- Compact and miniature keyboards.
- Dvorak and other alternative
layouts may offer more ergonomic layouts of the keys. There are
also variants of Dvorak in which the most common keys are located
at either the left or right side of the keyboard.
Input devices may be modified to make them easier to see and
understand:
- Keyboards with lowercase keys
- Keyboards with big keys.
- Keyboards with less and big keys, or multifunctional keys, such
us the special keyboard PiTech, with only five big rounded keys,
which is used with a special software for writing[1]
- Large print keyboard with high contrast colors (such as white
on black, black on white, and black on ivory).
- Large print adhesive keyboard stickers in high contrast colors
(such as white on black, black on white, and black on yellow).
- Embossed locator dots help find the 'home' keys, F and J, on
the keyboard.
- Scroll wheels on mice remove the need to locate the scrolling
interface on the computer screen.
- Footmouse -
Foot-operated mouse.
More ambitiously, and quite crucially when keyboard or mouse
prove unusable, AT can also replace the keyboard and mouse with
alternative devices such as the LOMAK keyboard, trackballs, joysticks, graphics
tablets, touchpads, touch screens, foot mice, a microphone with speech
recognition software, sip-and-puff input, switch access, and
vision-based input devices.
Software can also make input devices easier to use:
- Keyboard shortcuts and MouseKeys allow the user
to substitute keyboarding for mouse actions. Macro recorders
can greatly extend the range and sophistication of keyboard
shortcuts.
- Sticky keys allows characters or commands
to be typed without having to hold down a modifier key (Shift,
Ctrl, Alt) while pressing a second key. Similarly, ClickLock is a Microsoft
Windows feature that remembers a mouse button is down so that
items can be highlighted or dragged without holding the mouse
button down throughout.
- Customization of mouse or mouse alternatives' responsiveness to
movement, double-clicking, and so forth.
- ToggleKeys is a feature
of Microsoft
Windows 95 onwards. A high sound is heard when the CAPS LOCK,
SCROLL LOCK, or NUM LOCK key is switched on and a low sound is
heard when any of those keys are switched off.
- Customization of pointer appearance, such as size, color and
shape.
- Predictive
text
- Spell
checkers and grammar checkers
Durable Medical Equipment
(DME)
- Seating products that assist people to sit comfortably and
safely (seating systems, cushions, therapeutic seats).
- Standing products to support people with disabilities in the
standing position while maintaining/improving their health (standing frame,
standing
wheelchair, active stander).
- Walking products to aid people with disabilities who are able
to walk or stand with assistance (canes, crutches, walkers, gait
trainers).
- Advanced technology walking products to aid people with
disabilities, such as paraplegia or cerebral palsy, who would not
at all able to walk or stand (exoskeletons).
- Wheeled mobility products that enable people with reduced
mobility to move freely indoors and outdoors
(wheelchairs/scooters)
- Vehicles modified with Height adjustable
suspension, to allow wheelchair entry to the vehicle
- Robot-aided rehabilitation is a sensory-motor rehabilitation
technique based on the use of robots and mechatronic devices
Learning
difficulties
- Age-appropriate software
- Cause and effect software[2]
- Hand-eye co-ordination skills software
- Diagnostic assessment software
- Mind mapping
software
- Study skills software
- Symbol-based software[3]
- Text-to-speech
- Touch typing
software
Visual
impairment
Choice of appropriate hardware and software will depend on the
user's level of functional vision.
Hardware
- Large monitors.
- Adjustable task lamp, using a fluorescent bulb, shines directly
onto the paper and can be adjusted to suit.
- Copyholder holds
printed material in near vertical position for easier reading and
can be adjusted to suit.
- Closed
circuit television (CCTV) or video magnifiers. Printed materials and
objects are placed under a camera and the magnified image is
displayed onto a screen.
- Modified cassette recorder. To record a lecture, own thoughts,
ideas, notes etc.
- Desktop compact cassette dictation system. To allow audio
cassette playback with the aid of a foot pedal.
- Fusers produce tactile materials, for example diagrams and
maps, by applying heat to special swell paper.
- Scanner. A device used in conjunction with OCR software. The
printed document is scanned and converted into electronic text,
which can then be displayed on screen as recognisable text.
- Standalone reading aids integrate a scanner, optical character
recognition (OCR) software, and speech software in a single
machine. These function together without a separate PC.[4]
- Refreshable Braille
display. An electronic tactile device which is placed below the
computer keyboard. A line of cells which correspond to Braille text
move up and down to represent a line of text on the computer
screen.
- Electronic Notetaker. A portable computer with a Braille or
QWERTY keyboard and synthetic speech. Some models have an
integrated Braille display.
- Braille
embosser. Embosses Braille output from a computer by punching
dots onto paper. It connects to a computer in the same way as a
text printer.
- Perkins
Brailler. To manually emboss Grade 1 or 2 Braille.
Software
Augmentative
and Alternative Communication (AAC)
Augmentative and
alternative communication is a well defined specialty within
AT. It involves ways of communication that either enhance or
replace verbal language. When combined with Applied Behavior
Analysis (ABA) teaching methods, AAC has improved communication
skills in children with Autism. AAC devices vary widely with
respect to their technological sophistication:
- Low-tech systems. Simple paper or object based systems, i.e. do
not require a battery (e.g., Talking Mats, Dry Erase Boards,
Clipboards, 3-Ring Binders, Manila File Folders, Photo Albums,
Laminated PCS/Photographs, Highlight tape).
- Light-tech systems. Typically consisting of a digitized speech
recorder with a touch-sensitive display pad and sometimes switch
access. Lite-tech systems require a battery (e.g., Tape Recorder,
Language Master, Overhead Projector, Timers, Calculators).
- High-tech systems. Computerized VOCAs that vary from single
purpose appliance-like systems to multipurpose computer-based
communication aids. Typically high-tech systems require training
and ongoing support to operate the devices (e.g., Video Cameras,
Computers and Adaptive Hardware, Complex Voice Output
Devices).
Deafness and hearing
loss
Others
- Wakamaru provides
companionship, reminds users to take medicine and calls for help if
something is wrong.
- Telephone Reassurance: community based program that calls
seniors at home ensuring their well-being.[5]
- Cosmobot is part of a
play therapy system designed to motivate children to participate in
therapy.
- General User Interface for Disorders of Execution (GUIDE) is an
interactive verbal prompting system that talks people with
cognitive impairment through daily routine tasks.[6]
See also
References
- ^
PiTech
- ^
Bates, Roger; Jones, Melanie (2003). "Using Computer Software To
Develop Switch Skills". 2003 [Technology and Persons with
Disabilities] Conference Proceedings.
http://www.csun.edu/cod/conf/2003/proceedings/6.htm. Retrieved
2007-02-08.
- ^
Hawes, Paul; Blenkhorn, Paul (2002). "Bridging the Gap between
Aspiration and Capability for Aphasic and Brain Injured
People". 2002 [Technology and Persons with Disabilities]
Conference Proceedings. http://www.csun.edu/cod/conf/2002/proceedings/220.htm. Retrieved
2007-02-08.
- ^
"What is a reading aid –
technology information sheet". Royal National Institute for the Blind.
2006-09-29. http://www.rnib.org.uk/xpedio/groups/public/documents/PublicWebsite/public_readingaidsinfosheet.hcsp. Retrieved
2007-02-08.
- ^
assistivetech.net: Telephone Reassurance.
Accessed 2009-08-06.
- ^
Brian O'Neill and Alex Gillespie: "Simulating naturalistic
instruction: the case for a voice mediated interface for assistive
technology for cognition", Journal of Assistive
Technologies Volume 2, Issue 2 (June 2008): 22-31. Accessed
2009-08-06.
Further
reading
- Behrmann, M. & Schaff, J.(2001). Assisting educators with
assistive technology: Enabling children to achieve independence in
living and learning. Children and Families 42(3), 24-28.
- Bishop, J. (2003). The Internet for educating individuals with
social impairments. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning 19(4),
546-556. Available as a free download
- Cain, S. (2001). Accessing Technology - Using technology to
support the learning and employment opportunities for visually
impaired users. Royal National Institute for the Blind. ISBN
1-85878-517-0.
- Cook, A., & Hussey, S. (2002). Assistive Technologies -
Principles and Practice, 2nd Edition. Mosby. ISBN
0-323-00643-4
- Edwards, A. D. N., (Ed.) (1995). Extra-Ordinary Human-Computer
Interaction: Interfaces for Users with Disabilities. Cambridge
Series on Human-Computer Interaction. New York, Cambridge
University Press. (Also available as part of the CD-rom, Overcoming
Barriers: Theory and Practice in Disability, Cambridge University
Press, 1999).
- Franklin, K.S. (1991). Supported employment and assistive
technology-A powerful partnership. In S.L. Griffin & W.G.
Revell (Eds.), Rehabilitation counselor desktop guide to supported
employment. Richmond, VA: Virginia Commonwealth University
Rehabilitation Research and Training Center on Supported
Employment.
- Lahm, E., & Morrissette, S. (1994, April). Zap 'em with
assistive technology. Paper presented at the annual meeting of The
Council for Exceptional Children, Denver, CO.
- Lee, C. (1999). Learning disabilities and assistive
technologies; an emerging way to touch the future. Amherst, MA:
McGowan Publications.
- McKeown, S. (2000). Unlocking Potential - How ICT can support
children with special needs. The Questions Publishing Company Ltd.
ISBN 1-84190-041-9
- Nisbet, P. & Poon, P. (1998). Special Access Technology.
The CALL Centre, University of Edinburgh. Available as a free download The CALL Centre.
ISBN 1-898042-11-X
- Nisbet, P., Spooner, R., Arthur, E. & Whittaker P. (1999).
Supportive Writing Technology. The CALL Centre, University of
Edinburgh. Available as a free download The CALL Centre.
ISBN 1-898042-13-6
- Rose, D. & Meyer, A. (2000). Universal design for
individual differences. Educational Leadership, 58(3), 39-43.
- Orpwood, R. Design methodology for aids for the disabled. J Med
Eng Technol. 1990 Jan-Feb;14(1):2-10. | PubMed ID: 2342081
- Scherer, M. J. (2005). Living in the State of Stuck: How
Assistive Technology Impacts the Lives of People with Disabilities,
Fourth Edition. Cambridge, MA: Brookline Books: ISBN
1-571-29098-2.
- Scherer, M.J. (2004). Connecting to Learn: Educational and
Assistive Technology for People with Disabilities. Washington,
DC: American Psychological Association (APA) Books: ISBN
1-557-98982-6.
- Scherer, M.J. (Ed.). (2002). Assistive Technology: Matching
Device and Consumer for Successful Rehabilitation. Washington,
DC: APA Books: ISBN 1-557-98840-4.
- Swann, J.I. (2007) Promoting independence and activity in
older people Quay Books: ISBN 9781856423342
- Adlam, T. et al. The installation and support of
internationally distributed equipment for people with dementia."
IEEE transactions on information technology in biomedicine
(1089-7771) yr:2004 vol:8 iss:3 pg:253-257 | download from IEEE (694k
PDF)
- Poulson, David; Martin Ashby; Simon Richardson (eds.) (1996).
userfit. A practical handbook on user-centred design for
Assistive Technology. TIDE USER consortium.