This unique and worthwhile project was put together by a 17-year-old electronics and programming whiz from Honduras, of all places. The Eyeboard system is a low-tech eyeball-tracking device that allows users with motor disabilities to enter text into a computer using eye gestures instead of a physical interface. This kind of system is not unique - there's plenty of eye tracking interfaces out there - but Luis Cruz has figured out a way to build the full system into a set of glasses for less than US$300, putting easier communication within reach of users in developing countries. He's also releasing the software as open source to speed up development. Personally, I spent my year as a 17-year-old in a series of heroic failures trying to impress girls with my air guitar.
Tracking eyeball movements is far from a new science - in fact,
people have been studying eye movements for more than 130 years. Early
on, the main focus was on understanding how the process of reading works
- the way the eyes skip and dart across rows of text to take in written
information. Congratulations, you're now aware that your eyes are
jumping from word to phrase to word as you read this article!
While eyeball tracking used to be achieved using painstaking manual
mapping of direct observations, more recent technologies have made it
much easier and more precise. High-tech contact lenses, for example, can
now be used to map and record eye movement to provide data that's used
in everything from driver training to sports development to gaming,
virtual reality and medical research. Still, the dominant commercial
application by far is in advertising and usability - working out how
different designs steer the eye towards a final goal most effectively.
But for people with certain motor disabilities, particularly those
who don't have good control over their hands or voices, eye tracking can
take on a much more important role, as a hands-free computer interface
that can be a fantastic aid to communication, and a much easier
alternative than the head wand or mouth stick, which are used to tap on a
keyboard.
Unfortunately, eyeball tracking computer interfaces have proven to be
quite expensive on the market - anywhere from several thousand to more
than US$10,000 when combined with software. This puts them out of reach
of many affected people, particularly in developing countries where that
sort of money could represent several years of average earnings.
And that's where 18-year-old Honduran high school student Luis Cruz
is stepping in. Two years ago, Cruz indulged his love of electronics and
software tinkering by building a video game system - but in the last 12
months he's turned his focus to far less teenage pursuits.
Cruz has spent the last year building and developing an eye tracking
computer interface that works on the principles of electrooculography -
that is, measuring the resting potential of the retina using electrodes
placed just beside the eyes.
As it turns out, the human eye is polarized - the front of the eye
carries a positive charge and the rear of the eye has a group of
negatively charged nerves attached to the retina. So when the eye is
moved, you can use electrodes to measure the change in the dipole
potential of the eye through the skin.
It's a fairly lo-fi input - it doesn't track eye movements with
anywhere near the accuracy of a high tech contact lens or video tracking
system - but on the other hand, it's extremely cheap, and so uninvasive
that Cruz has managed to mount the electrodes in a pair of sunglasses.
And it's good enough at tracking macro eye movements to allow the next
phase of the project: the computer interface software.
Although Cruz's sensor glasses can only track horizontal eye
movements at this stage, he's developed a piece of software that takes
those inputs and uses them to choose letters in a grid, so that users
can type entire words using just their eye motions.
The Eyeboard system is still in a fairly embryonic state at this
stage, but Cruz believes the hardware can be produced cheaply - as in,
his prototypes cost somewhere between US$200-300 for a set of glasses -
and he's releasing the software as open source to enable quicker
development of tools like autocomplete which will make users'
communication even quicker and more fluid. Here's a little more about the effectiveness of electrooculography in computer interfaces.
Clearly, this is a kid with some serious drive - check out his technical documentation for a closer look at the project. If anyone feels like giving Cruz a helping hand, he's looking for PayPal donations
to help him towards a college education in America. Given how much he's
achieved in Honduras at such a young age, his potential and motivation
is clear, even if his home country doesn't afford a lot of
opportunities.
We wish Cruz the best of luck and hope to see the Eyeboard project
develop into something that can help the disabled community in Honduras
and around the world.
What were YOU doing when you were 17?
0 comments:
Post a Comment