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		<title>BU Professor creates computing solution for disabled</title>
		<link>http://blogs.bu.edu/otd/2010/09/20/bu-professor-creates-software-for-disabled/</link>
		<comments>http://blogs.bu.edu/otd/2010/09/20/bu-professor-creates-software-for-disabled/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Sep 2010 21:02:54 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Around BU]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[BU Today]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Camera Mouse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CAS]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blogs.bu.edu/techdev/?p=196</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[CAS Computer Science Professor Margrit Betke, frustrated at the lack of computer resources for the severely disabled, created Camera Mouse, software that uses a webcam to link pre-selected facial movements to cursor commands. Check out the article and video (originally published in BU Today) below. BU Today- Every day, our world grows more digital and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>CAS Computer Science Professor Margrit Betke, frustrated at the lack of computer resources for the severely disabled, created Camera Mouse, software that uses a webcam to link pre-selected facial movements to cursor commands.</h2>
<h2 style="font-size: 1.5em">Check out the article and video (originally published in <a href="http://www.bu.edu/today/" target="_blank">BU Today</a>) below.</h2>
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<h2>BU Today- Every day, our world grows more digital and more of our lives migrates to an electronic format. But Margrit Betke, a College of Arts &amp; Sciences associate professor of computer science, believes the networked world isn&#8217;t nearly as inclusive as it ought to be.</h2>
<h2>&#8220;The community of people with severe disabilities is not really well served by computer science,&#8221; Betke says. &#8220;Many people impaired by diseases like multiple sclerosis or ALS cant type Google searches. They cant play video games, and they cant click on a friend&#8217;s e-mail.&#8221;</h2>
<h2>So, in collaboration with James Gips, a Boston College professor of computer science, and several of her students, Betke has spent the last eight years developing a camera mouse that greatly expands accessibility to the digital world. The camera mouse software uses a computer webcam to lock onto and track a chosen section of the users face — a nostril or the tip of an eyebrow, for example — and then links that persons head movement to a cursor on the screen. Move right and the cursor goes right. Move left and it reverses direction. Pause for several seconds over a link and it clicks.</h2>
<h2>Betke and her fellow researchers have adapted a camera mouse to work with several popular programs, such as Microsoft Word. They&#8217;ve also created custom software that allows computer users with disabilities to type e-mails, edit photographs, create music, and fight space aliens, among other activities.</h2>
<h2>In spring 2007, after a failed attempt to build a company around the new technology, Betke and Gips decided to give camera mouse away online. These days, about 2,500 people download it every month. The researchers get frequent e-mails from people as far away as Australia and Uzbekistan, thanking them and asking for technical assistance.</h2>
<h2>&#8220;With software, there&#8217;s always an issue of maintenance,&#8221; says Betke. Requests to fix a software bug or make camera mouse compatible with the latest operating system always get highest priority. A request for a camera mouse version of Flight Simulator, on the other hand, becomes a candidate for a class project. Betke&#8217;s students also work as volunteers in places like the Boston Home, a nursing care center for adults with neurodegenerative diseases, whose residents have used camera mouse.</h2>
<h2>What&#8217;s next? Betke hopes to make camera mouse more adaptable to the wide range of mobility limitations, arranging navigation buttons to match a persons most controlled range of motion, for example, or accommodating the slow diminishment of a user&#8217;s skills.</h2>
<h2>&#8220;It&#8217;s a challenge that is facing all human-computer interface research,&#8221; says Betke. &#8220;We can adapt our own system with user profiles and all that, but to actually have the computer figure it out for us and help us along is a very different story.&#8221;</h2>
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