RIAS (Remote Infrared Audible Signage)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remote Infrared Audible Signage (RIAS) was developed by Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute so that print-handicapped people (blindness/low-vision/illiterate/foreign/visually impaired) would be able to access the information presented through textual graphics on signs in the built environment.

It consists of infrared transmitters repeatedly sending encoded spoken versions of the contents of the sign through wireless communication. An early version developed in 1979 called "Talking Lights" has been successfully upgraded/marketed commercially as "Talking Signs" which are being globally installed.

An associated handheld or glasses-mounted IR receiver is directionally sensitive to a direct, line-of-sight infrared light beam and orients the person by giving more positive feedback when the sign is being pointed to directly and is close.

The system has been tested and works effectively in both interior and exterior settings and does not disturb those environments because the IR beams are invisible and silent.

The principle of Alexander Graham Bell's photophone led to development of devices capable of transmitting/decoding infrared waves in systems ranging from military communications through remote control systems for televisions and computers.

References