2.009 makes its “Move!” onstage
Students pitched prototypes for a sea turtle incubator, a wheelchair speed control, a self-cleaning firehose system, and more.
Students pitched prototypes for a sea turtle incubator, a wheelchair speed control, a self-cleaning firehose system, and more.
The new design works with the diaphragm to improve breathing.
Using a new technology, researchers hope to create better control systems for prosthetic limbs.
Researchers have created prototypes that enable screen-reader users to quickly and easily navigate through multiple levels of information in an online chart.
Rise Bionics, founded by D-Lab Scale Ups fellow Arun Cherian, creates customized assistive devices for patients in India.
For individuals who communicate using a single switch, a new interface learns how they make selections, and then self-adjusts accordingly.
New products presented by students at the annual event included a curb-climbing wheelchair attachment and seizure-preventing glasses.
Periodically catching up on sleep can improve gait control for the chronically sleep-deprived.
Researchers find blind and sighted readers have sharply different takes on what content is most useful to include in a chart caption.
Interdisciplinary research center funded by philanthropist Lisa Yang aims to mitigate disability through technologies that marry human physiology with electromechanics.
Advance incorporates sensing directly into an object’s material, with applications for assistive technology and “intelligent” furniture.
Prosthetic enables a wide range of daily activities, such as zipping a suitcase, shaking hands, and petting a cat.
Robotic arm equipped with a hairbrush helps with brushing tasks and could be an asset in assistive-care settings.
Jessica Xu, a senior studying mechanical engineering, draws upon her skills as an artist to develop medical devices and assistive technologies.
Pison, founded by Dexter Ang ’05, enables people to control digital interfaces, such as their phones, through brain signals.