Automated Braille Display
During 1991 an idea was developed to produce a braille display
which would be small in size and simple in construction. It is based
on the idea that reverses the role of the finger and braille cells.
To read braille, the person keeps the finger at rest and the braille
moves beneath it. During late 1991 and early 1992, two visits were made
to the Governor Morehead School for the Blind and the North Carolina
Rehabilitation Center for the Blind both in Raleigh, North Carolina
to obtain information as to how the blind read braille and to obtain
characteristics of a good refreshable braille display.
During 1992 and 1993 a prototype computer-aided braille display
was built by X. Yong Lu as a masters degree thesis in Applied Physics.
This braille display is shown below.
Prototype Braille Display
It contains two large braille cells located opposite each other on a
small disk. Below the disk are six solenoids which raise the braille
pins. While the disk rotates half a revolution, the finger reads the
braille content. At the other end of the disk, there is a piece of metal
that rakes the pins to the reset position. During the second half of the
disks rotation, the braille cell pins are reset and that cell is positioned
on top of the solenoids to be programmed with the new braille character
by the solenoids.
The braille cell display is connected to a PC parallel port and
the ASCII string is converted to grade level one braille. The braille pin
information is amplified and drives each solenoid. The display has two
controls, one to repeat the braille characters and the other to control
the speed of the disk. With two braille cells on the disk, the maximum
reading speed is 54 characters per minute.
During the Fall 1996 Bruce Stancell began working on an improved
Braille Display for his master's thesis. His emphasis is to make it
portable, reduce the braille cells to the standard size and incorporate
a floppy disk so that it can be a stand-alone instrument. It will still
have the feature of being used with a PC parallel port.
During the first week in March 1997 a demonstration of the
prototype Braille Display and some features of the portable braille
display were demonstrated at the American Printing House in Louisville,
KY. Mr. Stansell researched the size of the disk and the number of cells
on the disk. After making several paper models and having several blind
students at the North Carolina Rehabilitation Center for the Blind try the
disks it was decided to build a four inch (100 mm) disk with 30 braille
cells located on a radius of 3 inches (75 mm.) Six selenoids were used to
push up the braille pins and their actuation was controlled by two encoder
wheels and an 8051 microcontroller. It took half a diameter of rotaton to
produce a braille cell so there were 15 cells available for reading.
Students who tried this method, thought that the braille was a long straight
line of cells and never envisioned the rotation. The braille cell size was
the standard braille book size. The reading speed of this device is 150 cells
per minute or 30 words per minute.
In 1999 Christoper Tullar began to develop a mechanical linear
display using some of the ideas of Mr. Stansell's device. He developed a
40 cell display that was very simple to use. It was finished late in 2001
and was taken to the NC Rehabilitation Center for trial. Each of the seven
students who used the linear refrehable display either wanted to purchase
one immediately or thought it was a great reading device. The device is
activated by the user and reads grade level one braille at the speed of up
to 1000 cells per minute or 200 words per minute.
Now we wish to make each of the devices a stand-alone unit with
either a self-contained floppy disk or CD ROM drive. Presently each uses a
PC to download an ASCII output from a word processor.
Work on the portable braille display continues...
020904