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RERC on AAC

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    • Archives (2014-2020)
      • R1: Brain-computer interface
      • R2: Supporting transition to literacy
      • R3: Visual cognitive processing demands
      • D1: Multimodal technologies
      • D2: Interactive video visual scene displays
      • D3: Smart Predictor app
      • D4: Cognitive demands checklist
  • Research
    • R1: Video Visual Scene Display (VSD) Intervention
    • R2: AAC Literacy Decoding Technology
      • Design of the transition to literacy (T2L) decoding feature
    • R3: Motion to improve AAC user interface displays
    • Consumer & Technology Forums
      • Communication with Direct Support Professionals: The Experiences of AAC Users (2024)
      • The participation of people who rely on AAC in the pre-service preparation of communication, education, and medical professionals (2023)
      • The patient-provider experiences of people with CP who use AAC (2022)
  • Development
    • D1: Access Assistant Software to Improve Alternative Access Services
    • D2: Smart Select: a new switch access method
    • D3: mTraining in AAC for Communication Partners
  • Training
    • T1: Mentored Research and Lab Experiences
    • T2: Rehabilitation Engineering Student Capstone Projects
    • T3: Student Research and Design Challenges
    • T4: Doctoral Student AAC Research Think Tank
    • T5: Webcasts & Instructional Modules
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Brain-Computer Interfaces for Assessment, Rehabilitation and Control

June 6, 2015 by David McNaughton

Christoph Guger and Melanie Fried-Oken will present on a workshop on Brain-Computer Interfaces for Assessment, Rehabilitation and Control at RESNA (Denver, Colorado) on June 14.

Filed Under: News, Presentation

RESNA 2015

June 5, 2015 by David McNaughton

Please join the RERC on AAC at RESNA 2015 in Denver, Colorado

Filed Under: Presentation

Radio Interview on WHYY (NPR, Philadelphia)

May 9, 2015 by David McNaughton

David McNaughton discussed the research and development activities of the RERC on AAC with Steven Trader of WHYY (NPR, Philadelphia)

Filed Under: Presentation

Integrating Speech Recognition into AAC Technology (Fager & Jakobs, 2015)

May 9, 2015 by David McNaughton

Fager and Jakobs presented their work on integrating speech recognition into AAC technology at ATIA (2015).

Filed Under: Presentation

ATIA – 2015

January 21, 2015 by David McNaughton

RERC on AAC partners Susan Fager and Tom Jakobs presented at ATIA 2015 in Orlando, Florida

Filed Under: Presentation Tagged With: conference, news, presentations

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Recent Posts

  • The first word in accessibility is “access” (Regan, 2025)
  • Alternative ways to access AAC technologies (Ramirez, 2025)
  • Future of AAC technologies: priorities for inclusive innovation (Williams & Holyfield, 2025)
  • Nothing about AAC users without AAC users: a call for meaningful inclusion in research, technology development, and professional training (Blasko et al., 2025)
  • To include us in our own worlds: AAC is not optional (Koloni, 2025)

Recent Publications and Presentation

Patrick Regan and a quote from his article in the AAC journal

The first word in accessibility is “access” (Regan, 2025)

Patrick Regan (2025) is President-Elect of USSAAC, and he also plays leadership roles in ISAAC, and in outreach programs for the Bridge School. Patrick experiences Spinal Muscular Atrophy, and has used a wide variety of AAC to communicate. In this paper, he describes “access challenges that I have experienced as someone who uses AAC, how my team and I have resolved them, and what challenges I face now.”

Now free at the AAC journal
https://doi.org/10.1080/07434618.2025.2513912

Other recent activity

Conferences

Recent

ASHA (2024) handouts and virtual posters

ATIA (2025) handouts

Upcoming

ASHA 2025

 

 

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The contents of this website were developed under a grant from the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR grant number 90REGE0014) to the Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center on Augmentative and Alternative Communication (RERC on AAC). NIDILRR is a Center within the Administration for Community Living (ACL), Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The contents of this website do not necessarily represent the policy of NIDILRR, ACL, or HHS, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government.