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ATLAS |
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Assistive
Technology Laboratory at Stanford |
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Technology
and design benefitting individuals with disabilities and older adults in the
local community |
February 28, 2018 |
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Perspectives is the newsletter of the
Stanford course, Perspectives in Assistive
Technology.
Assistive Technology
Faire
This issue invites you
to attend the Assistive Technology Faire and announces two upcoming local
events.
Perspectives in Assistive Technology is a Winter
Quarter Stanford course - now in its twelfth year - that explores the
design, development, and use of assistive technology that benefits people with
disabilities and older adults. It consists of semi-weekly classroom
discussions; lectures by notable professionals, clinicians, and
assistive technology users; tours of local medical, clinical, and
engineering facilities; student project presentations and demonstrations; an
assistive technology faire; and a film screening. Organization of
the coming year's course is underway, with the first class session in
January. |
Next class
session - Thursday, March 1st at 4:30pm just outside the classroom,
Thornton 110. In case of heavy rain, the
Faire will be held in the classroom.
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Assistive Technology
Faire
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Abstract: This 6th annual event will provide an
opportunity for students and community members to get an up-close look at a
variety of devices and learn about available programs from product vendors and
service agencies. Users of assistive technology products as well as small
companies and agencies serving individuals with disabilities and older adults
will bring assistive technology devices to display, demonstrate, and discuss.
Everyone is welcome to attend the faire. Here are
Dave's and
Arne's photos from last year's
Faire.
Vendor Participants:
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Canine Partners for
Life Abigayil Tamara & Service Dog
Nathan and Edward Crane & Service Dog Alepo
Canine Partners
for Life (CPL) of Cochranville, PA trains and places service dogs with
individuals with disabilities - including those who require alerts due to
diabetic, cardiac, or seizure conditions - to increase their independence and
quality of life. CPL is a non-profit organization, operating completely on
donations, and charges recipients only a small fraction of the actual cost
($30,000) of training a dog (2 years). |
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BeeLine Reader
BeeLine Reader, Inc - Nick Lum
BeeLine
Reader is a software tool that improves reading ability by displaying
text using a color gradient that wraps from the end of one line to the
beginning of the next. This gradient pulls the readers eyes through the
text, making reading easier. This approach is especially helpful for readers
with dyslexia, ADHD, and various vision impairments. |
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Service Dog Training
Service
Dog Tutor - Jean Cary and Service Dog Flicka
Service Dog Tutor adapts clients' own dogs
to do specific service tasks for their owners. Clients include older adults and
children who have mobility and balance challenges as well as cognitive
disabilities. |
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Dance4Healing Tele-exercise Live
Video Platform Dance4Healing - Amy
Li Dance4Healing is a
tele-exercise live video platform leading telehealth into physical
rehabilitation, bringing community support, exercise, and fun to home care.
Inspired by founder Amy Li's stage IV cancer journey, our mission is to
alleviate mental and physical pain and reduce medical costs. Rooted in
neuroscience and published medical studies, our social platform connects dance
teachers, clinicians, chronic patients, care-partners, elders, and healthy
users. We use artificial intelligence and behavior design to provide and
recommend personalized music, dance, buddies, and groups; use feedback from
patient monitoring to record progress; and suggest follow-on
therapies. |
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RoScooter
ROTA
Mobility - Michelle Koller ROTA
Mobility creates innovative exercise mobility products which their riders
ro-to-go for better health and well-being. The RoScooter uses a
self-propelling PSM (Power Steering Module) featuring CLD (Central Lever Drive)
bicycle- style steering, gearing, and braking, enabling riders to exercise by
simply going places. The RoChair has the same PSM as the RoScooter, but in a
lightweight chair frame, allowing those who cannot use RoScooter, the same
efficient manual propulsion to very quickly and easily get around, indoors and
out. |
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Ability Tools Device Lending
Library Silicon Valley Independent Living Center - Joe
Escalante Silicon Valley Independent
Living Center (SVILC) is a cross-disability, intergenerational, and
multicultural disability justice organization that creates fully inclusive
communities that value the dignity, equality, freedom and worth of every human
being. SVILC maintains a
lending
library of assistive technology so consumers may borrow a device free of
charge and try it before buying it, use it to compare similar devices, or to
use while a personal device is being repaired. |
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Eatwell Tableware Set
Sha
Design - Sha Yao Eatwell is
an assistive tableware set for people with special needs. It's universal,
user-centric design can benefit those with cognitive (such as Alzheimer's and
other dementia conditions), motor (Parkinson's disease and various scleroses),
and physical impairments. |
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Powered Clothing
Seismic -
Avery Herron and Paudie Walsh Seismic strives to shape human potential through a new
integration of apparel and robotics we call Powered Clothing. Our mission
is to create apparel that improves the lives of everyone no matter their
age, health, or fitness goals. Seismics Wearable Strength is
changing how technology can improve life. |
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Luminescent Insulating Light
Switch Plates LUMINNO - David Shaw
GlowaSwitch is a patented light
switch plate that utilizes a long persistence photoluminescent material to glow
all night long making locating light switches in the dark safer for the
elderly, children, just about everyone. Each plate is paired with a fire
retardant foam gasket that insulates the switch hole from air draft to help
conserve energy. The white foam backing also retro reflects light through the
translucent plate to further enhance the glow effect. A convex form makes the
glow visible from afar at any angle. Because the glow material charges with
natural and artificial light, it uses no electricity, requires no wiring, and
consumes no energy at all regardless of how many are installed. GlowaSwitch
adds overnight glow safety and energy-saving insulation features to upgrade the
ubiquitous light switch plate which has done nothing more than cover a hole in
the wall for the past century. "GlowaSwitch is the light switch plate
reinvented." |
Attend a lecture - The
schedule of guest lectures has been finalized.
Class sessions will be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4:30 to 5:50pm and are open to the greater
Stanford community. You are most welcome to sit in on any class sessions that
interest you. You need not be a Stanford student and there is no required
signup, enrollment, or charge. The class will meet in a large, tiered,
accessible classroom on campus in the Thornton Center, adjacent to the Terman
Fountain and near the Roble Gym, the same venue as last year. Here are the
parking options, maps, and directions to the
classroom. |
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Remaining class sessions: |
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Upcoming Local
Events
Center on Longevity Design Challenge
Finals
Come
for a day of exciting pitches by student teams from across the globe as they
present their ideas for "Promoting Lifelong Healthy Habits through
Design!"
The
Stanford
Center on Longevity Design Challenge offers cash prizes and free
entrepreneur mentorship in a competition open to all university students around
the world who want to design products and services which optimize long life for
us all.
When: |
Tuesday, April 17th from 8:30am to 4:00pm |
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Stanford GSB Cool Product Expo
"The
Cool Product Expo is an annual exposition
of the most innovative products from Silicon Valley and beyond. Every year
exhibitors come to Stanford GSB to demonstrate groundbreaking hardware,
software, consumer tech, wearables, thinkables, driveables - anything and
everything you can imagine."
When: |
Wednesday, April 18th from 3:00 to 4:00pm |
Admission: |
Free and open to the public |
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Support the course - Funding in
any amount for the course and student projects is always welcomed. Monetary
gifts support approved project expenses, administrative costs, honoraria for
guest lecturers, and the end-of-term celebration. Refer to the
Team Project Support webpage for more
information.
Email questions, comments, or
suggestions - Please email
me if you have general questions, comments, or suggestions regarding the
course. Thank you again for your interest.
Dave
To unsubscribe from this newsletter, please email
Dave. |
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