Abstract

A wide range of obstacles faced by people with disabilities, such as visual impairment, motor disability, and communication difficulties, have shown significant promise for being addressed by computer vision. The state-of-the-art in computer vision-based assistive technology is examined in this report along with major future research topics and obstacles. In particular, this study explores how computer vision can be used for object recognition, navigation, facial recognition, sign language interpretation, and gesture-based control interfaces. It also discusses the benefits and drawbacks of various methodologies and technologies and offers examples of how computer vision can be incorporated into current assistive technologies to boost their efficacy. The ethical and privacy issues surrounding the use of computer vision in assistive technologies are covered in this study effort. The study also highlights the need for protocol standardization, better user-centered design, and the assessment of real-world effectiveness as future research objectives for improving the use of computer vision in assistive technology. Overall, this paper sheds light on how computer vision might completely alter the world of assistive technologies for people with impairments.

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