Hi Amy,

As noted in the previous email, we had the more "traditional" eye gaze height and explored if there were "visual field cuts" that would risk the safety of small children, pets, toys, other items lying on the floor or drops offs/curbs, steps etc... our client stated he could see below the screen to note if any driving hazards were present beyond which were displayed on the forward facing camera.



On Thu, Sep 19, 2019 at 9:46 AM Amy Roman <xxxxxx@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
Hey Pam and John, I noticed that too but I did notice that there was, what seemed like, a virtual image of the area in front of the wheelchair on the screen. Might this allow the screen to be higher for optimal use?

Amy Roman, MS, CCC-SLP
AmyandpALS.Com
Pinterest.com/AmyandPALS
Twitter @AmyandPals
Forbes Norris ALS Research and Treatment Center
2324 Sacramento Street
San Francisco, CA 94115
Cell (415)518-0592
Fax (415)600-3778

On Sep 19, 2019, at 6:37 AM, pamela mathy <xxxxxx@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi John,

Thank you for this demo--very cool. The device (looks like an EM-12) was mounted rather low for best view for driving the chair and the eye-tracking was working well for the directional arrow buttons which are larger targets than would be needed for eye tracking communication for someone with ALS. Does the mount need to be moved up for optimal eye-tracking communication?

Thank you again for sharing. I am going to send this video to the wheelchair vendor reps who cover our ALS clinic here at the University of Utah Health.

Best,

Pam Mathy
Director of Clinical Education and Director of the University of Utah Speech-Language-Hearing Clinic
University of Utah

On Wed, Sep 18, 2019 at 11:48 AM Costello, John (Otolaryngology) <xxxxxx@childrens.harvard.edu> wrote:

Like any first-time driver, I was a bit unsure as this really WAS my first attempt but this was still quite easy, integrated into a Surface Pro.

 

The video is edited and sound cut out as this was filmed in a busy clinic and patient faces and voices were deleted.

 

While our ALS – AAC Program will not do any wheelchair/seating work, we will integrate this system with as many different AAC technologies as possible and make our patients aware of the strategy and local resources to further investigate/formally assess.

 

https://youtu.be/K0LB6X1SZSw

 

 

Cool stuff and major hope for our patients.

 

 

John

 

 

John M. Costello

Director, Augmentative Communication Program and 

ALS Augmentative Communication Program

Boston Children's Hospital

781.216.2220

                                   @costello_j

 

 



--


Lisa Bruening, M.S., CCC-SLP

Director of Care Services

The ALS Association Northern Ohio Chapter


p:  216-592-2572  d:  216-867-1262   m: 440-399-7096 

a:  6155 Rockside Rd, Suite 403, Independence, OH 44131

www.alsaohio.org    xxxxxx@alsaohio.org


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