High School Students Build “Atheia” For Visually Impaired During Pandemic
Description

Taking advantage of the abilities of machine learning, a group of bright high school students have created an app called “Atheia” that will not only help detect objects but also describe a scene just as a human would.

The app strives to improve spatial awareness and safety for blind people. According to the source article, it can also identify family and friends through facial recognition, has a built in text reader to read text on objects aloud and can search for objects in the person’s immediate surrounding.

The students, Eugene Choi, Raffu Khondaker, Irfan Nafi, and Pranav Ravella, all seniors at the Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology , in Alexandria, Va, began work on this idea in 2019. The original plan was to create a scanner on a glove that would describe the surroundings to the person. However, with feedback from blind individuals and going through multiple iterations (visor, eyeglass attachment, vibrating box on a belt loop), they decided on a mobile app. Currently, this app is being tested by volunteers at Blind Industries and Services of Maryland , a not for profit organization in Baltimore that provides career related services to visually impaired people.

There is a free version of Atheia on the iOS App Store that you can download and try. The students are expecting to charge maybe $10/month in the future. A few years ago, Microsoft released Seeing AI that has similar features.

Watch the demo video below to see how this app works and definitely read the source article to learn about how this app was built, some pitfalls these students experienced, and other details.

Source: IEEE, Washington Post

The post High School Students Build “Atheia” For Visually Impaired During Pandemic appeared first on Assistive Technology Blog.

Comments
Order by: 
Per page:
 
  • There are no comments yet
Related Feed Entries
In a landmark move for the global assistive technology community, the Ministry of Electronics & IT recently unveiled a comprehensive strategy to transform India from a text-heavy digital landscape into a voice-first ecosystem. Launched at the India AI Summit Expo 2026, this initiative is anchore…
4 days ago · From Assistive Technology Blog
By Sam Blanco, PhD, LBA, BCBA There’s a famous quote from W. Edwards Deming that says “Without data, you’re just another person with an opinion.” While Deming wasn’t a behavior analyst, this statement aligns closely with how BCBAs approach their work. Most BCBAs will report how much they love …
4 days ago · From Different Roads to Learning
Adidas has announced the launch of the Supernova Rise 3 Adaptive, its first performance running shoe specifically designed for athletes with disabilities. Developed over several years, the shoe was inspired by Chris Nikic—the first person with Down syndrome to complete an Ironman—who previously stru…
10.04.2026 · From Assistive Technology Blog
 Dear Friends, I never write for our blogs but I wanted to share this glimmer of hope. This weekend, an acquaintance of a friend of a friend asked me to view a French film called “No Filter Café” at a Socially Relevant Film Festival in NYC.  It’s a film in French about 5 young men…
31.03.2026 · From Different Roads to Learning
With the April 24, 2026, deadline for the updated ADA Title II regulations rapidly approaching, the landscape of digital inclusion is shifting from reactive accommodation to proactive accessibility. This mandate requires large public institutions to ensure that every facet of their digital presence—…
28.03.2026 · From Assistive Technology Blog
Rate
0 votes
Info
25.01.2022 (25.01.2022)
372 Views
0 Subscribers
Recommend
Tags