Press Release: Georgia Tech and Atlanta's Shepherd Center Awarded $4.75 million to assist people with disabilities
Georgia Tech and
Funding Supports Development of Wireless Technologies for People with Disabilities
ATLANTA (Oct. 19, 2011) –The Georgia Institute of Technology and Shepherd Center have been awarded a $4.75 million, five-year grant from the U.S. Department of Education’s National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR) for research and development of wireless technologies aimed at enhancing the lives of people with disabilities. The grant supports the continuation of a decade of innovative research and engineering at the Wireless Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center (RERC), a collaboration between
“This funding will allow us to move into new and emerging areas and leverage our relationships with the wireless industry, disability organizations, governmental agencies, and other researchers and engineers to promote equitable access to wireless technologies and to develop new assistive technologies built on wireless platforms,” said Helena Mitchell, executive director of the Center for Advanced Communications Policy (CACP) at Georgia Tech’s School of Public Policy and principal investigator and co-director of the Wireless RERC grant. “This award affirms the growing importance of wireless technologies for those who have disabilities.”
The award is the third consecutive five-year grant awarded to this team of researchers and engineers.
“We are pleased that NIDRR continues to support the Wireless RERC’s important work,” said Mike Jones, director of Shepherd’s Crawford Research Institute and co-director for the Wireless RERC grant. “The rapid pace at which wireless technology has evolved over the past several years – a pace that is expected to accelerate in the future – requires ongoing effort to ensure that the accessibility needs of people with disabilities are incorporated into new technologies.”
In technology development, the Wireless RERC will launch a new incubator to develop software applications (“apps”); the Apps Factory will fund innovative internal and external ideas on a competitive basis to provide apps to people with disabilities across a wide range of platforms. This work will enhance accessibility to this critical wireless technology and build new assistive tools based on these “smart” wireless platforms. Additionally, the Wireless RERC will continue its work developing solutions to enhance the effectiveness and accessibility of emergency alerting and access to 9-1-1 emergency services.
The Wireless RERC will also continue its focus on consumer and public policy research, including wireless use and usability by consumers with disabilities and studies that may shape the development of public policy primarily related to general accessibility and emergency communications.
“Our public policy work is a critical component of the Wireless RERC,” Mitchell noted.
Over the years, CACP has submitted 29 filings for proposed rulemakings before the FCC and other regulatory agencies pertaining to issues of telecommunications access and emergency communications. CACP filings have been referenced or cited more than 60 times in ongoing rulemakings, including final rules and orders regarding advanced technologies and accessible mobile alerts.
The Wireless RERC is one of more than 20 RERCs in the
Georgia Tech participants in the Wireless RERC also include the Center for Assistive Technology and Environmental Access (CATEA),
About the Georgia Institute of Technology
Celebrating 125 years of academic excellence, the Georgia Institute of Technology is one of the world's premier research universities. Ranked seventh among U.S. News & World Report's top public universities and the second best public U.S. engineering and information technology university in the world by Times Higher Education World University Rankings, Georgia Tech enrolls more than 20,000 students within its Colleges of Architecture, Computing, Engineering, Liberal Arts, Management and Sciences, and is the nation's number one producer of female engineering and minority engineering Ph.D. graduates. Receiving approximately $557.8 million in sponsored awards (FY 10) and holding approximately 786 patents, Georgia Tech ranks among the nation's top ten in research expenditures among universities without a medical school.
About
Shepherd
Center , located in
Atlanta , GA , is a private, not-for-profit hospital specializing in medical treatment, research and rehabilitation for people with spinal cord injury or brain injury. Founded in 1975,
Shepherd
Center is ranked by U.S. News & World Report among the top 10 rehabilitation hospitals in the nation and is a 132-bed facility. Last year
Shepherd
Center had 913 admissions to its inpatient programs and 535 to its day patient programs. In addition,
Shepherd
Center sees more than 6,300 people annually on an outpatient basis. For more information, visit
Shepherd
Center online at shepherd.org.
Useful Links
Wireless RERC www.wirelessrerc.org
Center for Advanced Communications Policy www.cacp.gatech.edu




