The Borneo Post

Intel develops smart wheelchair controlled by facial movements

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INTEL has unveiled the Wheelie 7 kit, technology that allows motorised wheelchair­s to be driven with facial expression­s.

In collaborat­ion with HOOBOX Robotics, Intel developed the Wheelie 7 kit, a product designed to ease the transporta­tion of quadripleg­ics, those with amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, and senior citizens by allowing these individual­s to control their motorised wheelchair­s with nothing but facial expression­s.

The tech takes only seven minutes to install, and then users can choose from ten different facial expression­s like smiling, furrowing their brows, or wrinkling their nose to direct the wheelchair to move forward, turn, and stop. A 3D Intel RealSense Depth Camera SR300 is mounted on the chair to track these subtle movements in real time, then they are processed by AI algorithms. To ensure that this processing happens as quickly as possible, the system is supported by Intel Core processors and the Intel Distributi­on of OpenVINO Toolkit.

This technology was developed to help the hundreds of thousands of people who live with spinal cord injuries, the majority of whom indicate physical mobility as having the largest impact on life quality. The Wheelie 7 intends to provide users with regained autonomy, giving them new independen­ce and control over where they go.

According to HOOBOX, the monthly subscripti­on price for the kit is US$300 (RM1,260), and it’s currently available for the US and Brazil markets. — Relaxnews

 ??  ?? (Clockwise from top left) A view of a Yandex.Phone during a presentati­on in Moscow on Dec 5. The Android phone is on sale online at a cost of 17,990 roubles (RM1,130). • A woman uses her mobile phone to connect to internet in Havana. The internet service for mobile phones in Cuba started on Dec 6. • A Komatsu truck being retrofitte­d with driverless Caterpilla­r Autohaul technology to make it an autonomous vehicle, sits in a shed at Australia’s Fortescue Metals Group (FMG) Chichester Hub in Port Hedland, Western Australia. • Students operate their robot as they participat­e in a local competitio­n for schools in Kuwait City. — AFP/Reuters photos
(Clockwise from top left) A view of a Yandex.Phone during a presentati­on in Moscow on Dec 5. The Android phone is on sale online at a cost of 17,990 roubles (RM1,130). • A woman uses her mobile phone to connect to internet in Havana. The internet service for mobile phones in Cuba started on Dec 6. • A Komatsu truck being retrofitte­d with driverless Caterpilla­r Autohaul technology to make it an autonomous vehicle, sits in a shed at Australia’s Fortescue Metals Group (FMG) Chichester Hub in Port Hedland, Western Australia. • Students operate their robot as they participat­e in a local competitio­n for schools in Kuwait City. — AFP/Reuters photos
 ??  ?? HOOBOX Robotics collaborat­ed with Intel to develop the Wheelie 7. — Intel photo
HOOBOX Robotics collaborat­ed with Intel to develop the Wheelie 7. — Intel photo

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