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Featured Articles Faculty profile: Steve Robinson Engineering quality into undergraduate education TIME IS MONEY: A Madison company saves both with help from QRM EZ Access featured in accessible airport paging system Regular Features |
EZ Access featured in accessible airport paging system
In March, Phoenix (Arizona) Sky Harbor International Airport deployed the first fully accessible paging and information system. Developed by ARINC Incorporated, a leader in transportation communications and systems engineering, the ground-breaking system implements the Trace Research and Development Center's EZ Access technology. Airport visitors now can send and receive messages at paging assistance locations, or "PALs," using a keyboard or touch screen. For those who can't use the keyboard or touch screen, there is an audio version of what is on the screen and an EZ Access keypad that allows users to navigate the touch screen using only four buttons. The information also is available via a phone handset and information operator. The names of those being paged are both announced through speakers inside the terminal and displayed on monitors throughout the airport, enabling people with vision and hearing impairments to receive pages. "I think as soon as travelers experience the new system at Sky Harbor and how convenient and wonderful it is, you're going to see systems like this everywhere," says Phoenix City Councilwoman Peggy Bilsten. Sky Harbor long has been a leader in providing accessibility through careful physical design and by providing accessible services. It currently ranks as the world's 6th busiest airport, serving nearly 40 million passengers a year. "This is the first airport information system that is accessible and usable by all airport patrons, including those who are older and those with disabilities," says Professor Gregg Vanderheiden, Trace Center director. "We were very pleased to provide assistance on this project, and commend both ARINC and Sky Harbor for their commitment to accessibility." EZ Access is a set of interface enhancements that can be implemented in the design ofalmost any electronic product. These enhancements include simple interactive techniques and hardware components that can make products usable by more people, including those with disabilities. EZ Access was developed over the past six years as an outgrowth of the Trace Center's ongoing research and development on how to design standard information systems and products so that they are accessible for people with disabilities. The Trace Center has worked in the field of disability and technology for 33 years. Funded by the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, Trace is the leading center for research in the area of accessibility of standard information and telecommunications technologies.
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