AI-powered wayfinding for visual impairments converts camera input into spatial understanding—detecting obstacles, identifying landmarks, describing layouts—and guides someone through space via voice or haptic feedback. Rather than replacing human navigation, it extends what blind and low-vision people can do independently by providing real-time environmental awareness they can act on.
AI-powered wayfinding for visual impairments combines computer vision, GPS, and real-time object recognition to guide blind and low-vision users through physical and digital spaces by delivering spoken, haptic, or braille-ready navigation instructions.
These systems identify obstacles, read environmental signage, and describe spatial layouts, giving users with visual impairments a level of independent navigation that traditional white cane techniques and static screen readers cannot provide on their own.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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