Houston Chronicle Sunday

Access ability

Inventors say some of their tech can be so mundane it goes unnoticed

- By David M. Perry

Disabled DIYers lead the way to new, basic technology gains.

Technology is changing the ways that disabled people interact with the world; perhaps more important, it’s also shifting how the world interacts with disabled people.

As the 30th anniversar­y of the Americans With Disabiliti­es Act approaches on July 26, many leaders, designers and scholars in the disability community say that they aren’t excited by stair-climbing wheelchair­s, mechanical exoskeleto­ns or brain-controlled prosthetic­s. They are drawn to innovation­s that embed accessibil­ity into everyday technologi­es and the spaces that we all share. Also, they want people to stop trying to solve problems that don’t exist.

Mark Riccobono, who lost his sight to glaucoma as a child and is president of the National Federation of the Blind, says that blind people generally love their white canes, a simple and effective piece of technology. “A couple times a year someone comes to us and says, ‘We have this great new idea for how to replace the cane!’ ” he said. “We try to be objective, but no. You’re trying to solve a problem that’s not a problem.”

Disability technology can be so quotidian that nondisable­d users don’t even notice. GPS and spell-check, so ubiquitous for so many people, are technologi­es that assist me with dyslexia. Smartphone­s, where I find my GPS, may be the most powerful accessibil­ity devices in history, especially now that voice control offers an alternativ­e to touch screens for blind and low-vision users, or people without the manual dexterity to operate them. (No interface is perfect, however. Some people might actually want buttons over sleek screens. And affordabil­ity remains a problem.)

As hubs for accessibil­ity programmin­g, though, smartphone­s drive down costs. For example, Fred Downs, who lost his left arm when he stepped on a land mine during the Vietnam War and is now an advocacy director for Paralyzed Veterans of America, says that in 1980, screenread­ers cost up to $50,000 a unit and could read one page at a time out loud. Now every computer, phone and tablet can read nearly any screen.

Smartphone­s provide navigation, manage hearing aids, run speech apps and can even drive a wheelchair.

Innovation­s build off these capabiliti­es, so now, for example, companies are working on mapping interior spaces to help people navigate them the same way detailed exterior maps currently do. Those who are disabled have long struggled to win the right to work from home; these days, technologi­es like cloud computing and video conferenci­ng are used everywhere and widely accepted at least for office jobs, especially as the coronaviru­s pandemic alters so many workplaces. Disabled employees who do not wish or are not able to go to an office can now more easily interact with their colleagues.

Disability-related technologi­es are not just growing through incrementa­l adjustment­s to existing products; transforma­tive ones are on the horizon. Rory Cooper is director of the Human Engineerin­g Research Laboratori­es, sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. He was paralyzed because of a spinal-cord injury in 1980 and has used a wheelchair since then. Now he is improving mobility devices, including wheelchair­s and scooters, by adapting components designed for vehicles and drones. Cooper says he can take new batteries, motors and algorithms from other industries and build “a much lighter chair with the same capabiliti­es.”

He has developed a waterproof chair that runs on compressed air, originally for a wheelchair-accessible water park. Water parks are fun, but more important, the innovation will make it easier for wheelchair users to go out in the rain. Meanwhile, makers of self-driving cars are now consulting not just blind users, who have long been involved, but people with myriad other disabiliti­es, including those in wheelchair­s, who would need to be able to roll into the vehicle.

At the New York Public Library’s Dimensions lab, Chancey Fleet, who is blind, is working with a team to make spatial learning easier for blind people and to provide access to informatio­n — part of the library’s core mission — to those who can best get it through touch. Visitors to the lab in the Heiskell branch of the library in Manhattan are invited to make 3D printed objects and tactile graphics, or graphics embedded with Braille and other textural elements to make their meaning legible by touch. Fleet is hoping to end what she calls “image poverty.”

She says as a blind child, “I thought I was someone who didn’t have any aptitude at all in STEM, even though I did well academical­ly.” But she later realized her problem was not with science and technology per se. ”Looking back, it seems as though I was a spatial learner,” she said. “If the images are there, it turns out that the aptitudes are there.”

Experts in disability and technology, like Ashley Shew, associate professor at Virginia Tech in the Department of Science, Technology and Society, says that the best of these projects emerge out of the DIY-culture so prominent within disabled communitie­s. Too often, the biggest and most promising innovation­s may come with hidden barriers, like cost, maintenanc­e and the need to customize them.

“We’ve been misled,” said Shew, who identifies as multiply disabled and uses hearing aids and prosthetic­s. “The public perception is very celebrator­y about new developmen­ts,” but this “completely looks over issues of maintenanc­e and wear. People think you’re given this item once and then it’s fixed for all eternity.”

Sara Hendren, who teaches design at Olin College of Engineerin­g in Massachuse­tts and is the parent of a child with Down syndrome, illustrate­s the benefits of empowering disabled designers in her forthcomin­g book, “What Can a Body Do?” In it she introduces us to Chris, who was born with one arm. After being stymied initially in trying to change his infant’s diaper, he ultimately joined felt holsters to soft cords that he could attach to his shoulder. The baby’s feet rest in the felt, secure.

“The result is nothing that dazzles at some tech expo,” but it reveals, Hendren said in an interview, how the right technology can make the “world bend a little bit” toward the user rather than just bending the user toward a normative world. Hendren said that adaptive technology, the phrase she prefers to the more commonly used “assistive technology,” is not about helping, but about shifting both the body and the world into closer harmony. It’s not using tech to make things seem “normal.”

For Shew, the Virginia Tech professor, the best way to ensure that this transforma­tion continues will require centering the power — and the money — on disabled people as the initiators of innovation. “The future of assistive tech should be ‘cripped,’” a once-pejorative term that many members of the disability community have reclaimed, she said. “It should be bent, claimed, reclaimed, reforged, hacked, owned/ controlled, made, swapped and shared by disabled people.”

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 ?? Hayley Wall / New York Times ?? So long to overhyped innovation­s. Hello to tech that embeds accessibil­ity into everyday devices.
Hayley Wall / New York Times So long to overhyped innovation­s. Hello to tech that embeds accessibil­ity into everyday devices.

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