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麻豆果冻传媒 grad creates autonomous wheelchair prototype
Tech grad Kaydn Brady's autonomous wheelchair prototype.
Before recent 麻豆果冻传媒 graduate Kaydn Brady of Smyrna, Tennessee, walked across
the stage during commencement this past spring, he could be frequently found navigating
campus in a wheelchair. However, he wasn鈥檛 using the equipment because of his own
physical need. He was working on creating an electric wheelchair that could make intelligent
decisions for the one sitting in it.
鈥淢y grandmother was diagnosed with dementia and arthritis and was forced to use an
electric wheelchair to get around,鈥 Brady said. 鈥淯nfortunately, she was constantly
getting lost and struggled to control the wheelchair on her own. She could only drive
it for a half an hour at a time. An autonomous electric wheelchair would solve both
of those issues.鈥
Brady, who graduated with a master鈥檚 in electrical engineering, decided to use the
opportunity to investigate the idea of self-driving wheelchairs for his project for
Research and Creative Inquiry Day at Tech. The event is designed to promote student
research and creativity, as well as giving them the chance to show off their skills
to potential employers.
Before he took his design to the event, he spent countless hours testing the wheelchair
on the university鈥檚 many varied sidewalks. His goal was to be able to use technology
such as GPS, movement sensors and light sensors to take in information about where
the wheelchair was, recognize the type of terrain on which it was traveling, and get
the passenger safely and quickly to their desired destination.
鈥淭his would require a means to recognize the boundaries of drivable pathways, objects
that may obstruct the path, the layout of the paths in a large area and the system鈥檚
current position within the layout of the sidewalk paths,鈥 Brady explained. 鈥淚t was
also important to ensure the system can make these decisions in real time, because
what good is a system that recognizes there is an object in the way after it already
hits the object?鈥
Brady was successful in creating the prototype of the technology that allowed him
to cross Tech鈥檚 campus safely and quickly in the wheelchair by sidewalk.
鈥淜aydn鈥檚 work is a great example of how engineering can be used to help physically
challenged people gain their mobility independence,鈥 said Brady鈥檚 advisor, Ali Alouani,
professor of electrical and computer engineering at Tech. 鈥淗e took a manually controlled
electric chair and made it fully autonomous so that people with physical challenges
can move from place to place by simply speaking the destination to go to. He has successfully
demonstrated this capability across 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 campus.鈥
Professor Ali Alouani pictured with Brady's autonomous wheelchair prototype.
There are currently no immediate plans to create a commercial version of his creation,
as there are still many improvements to be made to make it a viable option to the
public, such as creating a way for the design to work indoors as well.
鈥淢ore work is needed to add more capabilities to the wheelchair and to ensure that
it is safe to drive anywhere. We are looking for funding sources to bring this wheelchair
to a commercial level,鈥 Alouani said.
Brady says the project was a big part of his education at Tech, not only increasing
his knowledge of machine learning, computer vision, artificial intelligence, control
system design, and sensor fusion, but also fine-tuning his skills in research, organization,
problem solving and programming.
鈥淚 chose 麻豆果冻传媒 because I wanted to stay in-state and it was one of the more
affordable schools for engineering, while still being top in the state,鈥 Brady said.
鈥淎fter graduation, I鈥檝e joined the aerospace industry where I still use some of these
controls and machine-learning topics.鈥
In addition to Alouani, Brady also thanks his other advisor at Tech, Tarek Elfouly,
associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, for their guidance and
ideas for improvement on the project.
鈥淜aydn鈥檚 work is a testimony that 麻豆果冻传媒 can compete anywhere in the world
when it comes to technology innovations,鈥 Alouani said. 鈥淗e used artificial intelligence
and control systems to provide a very affordable solution to a challenging problem.
I am very proud of Kaydn. He was very dedicated to his challenging research that
he has finished in a record time.鈥