Developing Assistive Technology for People with Disabilities
Papers from the 1996 Fall Symposium
Holly Yanco, Program Cochair
Technical Report FS-96-05. Published by The AAAI Press, Menlo Park, California
This technical report is also available in book and CD format.
Please Note: Abstracts are linked to individual titles, and will appear in a separate browser window. Full-text versions of the papers are linked to the abstract text. Access to full text may be restricted to AAAI members. PDF file sizes may be large!
Contents
Using Adjustable Autonomy to Extend the Independence of the Elderly / 1
R. Peter Bonasso
Applying Natural Language Processing Techniques to Speech Prostheses / 5
Ann Copestake
Progess on the Deictic Controlled Wheelchair / 12
Jill D. Crisman and Michael E. Cleary
Opportunities for AI in the Use of Computer-Based Cognitive Prosthetics / 19
Mark B. Friedman and Elliot Cole
Towards an Intelligent Interface for EagleEyes / 24
James Gips
The TAO Project: Intelligent Wheelchairs for the Handicapped / 28
Takashi Gomi
Object Recognition with FM Sonar; An Assistive Device for Blind and Visually-Impaired People / 38
Gordon Kao, Penny Probert and David Lee
Multimodal HCI for Robot Control: Towards an Intelligent Robotic Assistant for People with Disabilities / 46
Zunaid Kazi, Shoupu Chen, Matthew Beitler, Daniel Chester and Richard Foulds
Personal Adaptive Mobility Aid (PAM-AID) for the Infirm and Elderly Blind / 53
Gerard Lacey and Kenneth M. Dawson-Howe
Wearable Tetherless Computer-Mediated Reality: WearCam as a Wearable Face-Recognizer, and Other Applications for the Disabled / 62
Steve Mann
The Intelligent Parser Generator: An Intelligent Language Aid for People with Cognitive Impairments / 70
Kathleen F. McCoy, Patrick Demasco, John Gray, Christopher A. Pennington, Marjeta Cedilnik, Arlene Luberoff Badman and Clifford Kushler
A Writing Tool for Users of American Sign Language / 78
Kathleen F. McCoy, Christopher A. Pennington and Linda Z. Suri
Moving in Tandem: Automated Person Pacing for Wheelchair Users / 86
David P. Miller
Saliency in Human-Computer Interaction / 89
Polly K. Pook
Design Issues for an Assitance Service with Force Feedback / 95
Christophe Ramstein and Jean-Francois Arcand
Using Probabilistic Reasoning to Develop Automatically Adapting Assistive Technology Systems / 104
Richard C. Simpson, Simon P. Levine and Heidi Horstmann Koester
Real-Time American Sign Language Recognition from Video Using Hidden Markov Models / 109
Thad Starner and Alex Pentland
Towards Automatic Translation from Japanese into Japanese Sign Language / 117
Masaaki Tokuda and Manabu Okumura
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