Winter Quarter 2011 Course Announcement

ENGR110/210
Perspectives in Assistive Technology

David L. Jaffe, MS and Professor Drew Nelson
Tuesdays & Thursdays   4:15pm - 5:30pm
Main Quad, Building 370, Classroom 370

Call for Project Ideas


Student project ideas are being sought for the assistive technology course at Stanford University this coming academic year.

The fifth season of Perspectives in Assistive Technology (ENGR110/210) will be offered in the Winter Quarter, starting in January. This class explores the engineering, medical, technical, and psychosocial challenges of implementing technology solutions for people with disabilities through lectures by experts in the fields of assistive technology and rehabilitation. In addition, teams of students work with project partners, coaches, and individuals with disability (or family members or health care professionals) to identify assistive technology needs, brainstorm ideas, formulate design solutions, fabricate devices, test them with users, and report their efforts.

In the past several years, many projects involving assistive technology have been undertaken. Previous years' projects were:

2010 Recharging Vest for Users of Implanted Deep Brain Stimulators
Standing and Walking Aid for Improved Balance and Stability

2009 iPhone Dialer for Individuals with Visual Impairments
Handi-Cart for Wheelchair Shoppers
Sonification of Movement for Individuals with Movement Restricting Disabilities
Opening Doors for Wheelchair Users

2008 Device to Press Elevator Buttons for Wheelchair Users
Liquid Metal Cane for Individuals who are Blind
Mobility Motivation Device for Children with Cerebral Palsy

2007 Accessible Fishing Pole
Aid for Donning an Artificial Leg
Device to Facilitate Moving Elderly People around Their Home
Rain Protector for Wheelchair Users

2006 Affordable Electric Page Turner for Individuals with ALS
Standing Aid for Children with Cerebral Palsy
Wheelchair Lift

The best projects typically win national design awards, even when competing against year-long design courses at other schools.

Project Ideas: Project ideas / suggestions are now being solicited. The broad requirements for projects are:

  • Deliverable: Projects must involve designing and fabricating a device (or software) to help individuals with disability.

  • Creativity: Student teams are required to fully understand the problem and need, brainstorm design concepts, and fabricate, test, and report on their creative solution. Their design should not be a copy of an existing commercial product.

  • Feasibility: The project's aim and specifications should be realistic. Project solutions that can only be achieved by violating the laws of physics or that presume the existence of an anti-gravity machine are examples of infeasible project ideas.

  • Overlap: Projects should focus on actual needs or problems that are inadequately addressed by commercial products and could include diagnostic and rehab therapy equipment as well as personal devices. Projects that assist family members or health care professionals in caring for individuals with disabilities are also welcomed.

  • Scale: Projects must be of appropriate scale and complexity to be completed (design, fabrication, and testing of a prototype) in one quarter (8 weeks).

  • Expertise: Projects must be compatible with the skill level and expertise of students in ENGR110/210. They typically have mechanical engineering backgrounds, although some may have electrical engineering, computer hardware, and software experience.

  • Cost: The estimated cost of any parts or fabrication must be modest, no more than a few hundred dollars.

  • Participation: A person with a disability, a family member of a person with a disability, or a health care professional should be available to work with the student project team to further identify the need, offer advice during the quarter, and test the prototypes.

  • Risk: The project must not pose a risk of harm to the user or student team. The device must be minimally invasive.

Please send any project ideas you have so they can be reviewed, compiled into a list, and offered to students in the first class session (Tuesday, January 4th). To best convey project ideas, they should be formulated into these short paragraphs:

  1. Background: give an overview of your organization or general description of the population addressed by your project idea

  2. Problem: briefly describe the problem or unmet need for the device you have in mind

  3. Aim: describe what the device should do

  4. Specifications: list the operational features and characteristics of the proposed device

  5. Other: provide any additional information, including weblinks and design suggestions

There will be an opportunity for those who suggest project ideas to present them to students in the second class session (Thursday, January 6th). The students will then consider all the offerings and choose projects that most interest them.

This is an excellent opportunity to have bright students work on projects that address long-standing problems experienced by people with disabilities.

Please contact me if you have any questions about the course and thank you for your project ideas.

David L. Jaffe, MS
Stanford University
Mechanical Engineering - Design Group
Thomas F. Peterson Engineering Laboratory - Building 550
416 Escondido Mall, Room 113
Stanford, CA  94305-4021
650/892-4464 cell
dljaffe -at- stanford.edu


Updated 12/24/2010

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