Trace Center Project Team:
Joseph M. Schauer, BSEE; David P. Kelso, MS; Gregg C. Vanderheiden, PhD
However, devices such as communication aids can only be used as controls if they can be effectively interfaced to the wheelchair. At the present time, special aids must be individually customized for each model of wheelchair they are to be used with. No common interfaces exist among powered wheelchair controllers, but several manufacturers are interested in developing them.
To assist in the development and application of new control devices, Trace Center engineers began developing a protocol for a standardized connection. As long as both the control and the wheelchair conform to the specifications of the standard, any manufacturer's control device can be used with any manufacturer's wheelchair.
Figure 1.
[Figure 1 under the Serial WheelChair Control Interface Standard shows two scenarios. The first scenario is a line drawing of the current wheelchair control model. In the first scenario, for a wheelchair to interface to anything other than a simple control joystick requires that a custom interface be built.
The second scenario in the Serial WheelChair Control Interface Standard shows a line drawing of the same wheelchair, only this time with the addition of a standard interface (e.g., the serial control model), many devices such as an intelligent joystick or a communication aid can easily be interfaced to the wheelchair.]
Schauer, J.M., Kelso, D.P., & Vanderheiden, G.C.(1990). Development of a serial auxiliary control interface for powered wheelchairs. Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual RESNA Conference. Washington, DC: RESNA.
BACK to COMPUTER ACCESS PROGRAM: SERIAL WHEELCHAIR CONTROL INTERFACE STANDARD