BFF-34 Boom in innovation for overcoming disabilities: UN

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Boom in innovation for overcoming disabilities: UN

GENEVA, March 23, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – Innovations aimed at helping people
overcome mobility, sight and other disabilities have exploded in recent
years, and are becoming ever more integrated in regular consumer goods, the
United Nations said Tuesday.

More than one billion people worldwide currently need technology-based
assistance to overcome a disability — a figure expected to double in the
next decade as populations age, UN data shows.

Meanwhile, only one in 10 people globally currently have access to the
assistive products they need.

To meet the growing demand, innovations in new assistive products have
shown double-digit growth in recent years, according to a fresh report from
UN’s World Intellectual Property Organization.

“People living with impairments have long relied on new technologies for
increased independence and fuller interaction with their world,” WIPO chief
Daren Tang said in the foreword to the report.

“From the invention of the crutch in ancient Egypt through the simple
prosthetics of the Middle Ages to our latter-day Braille tablets, we are now
on the cusp of a future where autonomous wheelchairs, mind-controlled hearing
aids and wearables monitoring health and emotion alleviate the impact of
human limitations.”

– ‘Mass use’ –

A key finding in the report, he said, is “the evolution toward mass use of
assistive tech.”

Using patent and other data, the report found that more than 130,000
patents were filed for conventional and emerging assistive technologies
between 1998 and 2020.

More than 15,500 of those filings were for so-called emerging assistive
technologies, like assistive robots, smart home applications, wearables for
visually impaired people and smart glasses.

That was eight times fewer than the 117,000-plus patents filed for
conventional technologies for well-established products like wheelchair seats
or Braille-enabled devices.

But WIPO pointed out that filings for new assistive technologies were
growing 17 percent on average each year — three times faster than the growth
rate for conventional technology filings.

The report found that China, the United States, Germany, Japan and South
Korea were the countries where most innovation in assistive technology was
taking place.

Universities and public research organisations are the most prominent when
it comes to filing patent applications for emerging assistive technologies.

WIPO experts hailed how assistive technologies were rapidly converging
with mainstream consumer electronics, paving the way for a greater
commercialisation and lower prices.

– Going mainstream –

Marco Aleman, a WIPO assistant director general who leads the agency’s IP
and Innovation Ecosystems Sector, pointed to the swelling interest in
enabling technologies like brain-machine interfaces.

As a result, big tech companies, like IBM, Google and Microsoft, and
consumer product companies like Samsung and Panasonic were eagerly entering a
market once dominated by specialised assistive technology companies, like WS
Audiology and Second Sight.

“This creates a condition for a very healthy competition environment, in
which we should see the positive impact of that competition into market
prices and on the availability of those products,” Aleman told reporters.

The WIPO experts stressed that policies and regulations would be needed to
ensure that assistive technologies become more widely available to those who
need them.

But the market was also playing an important role in improving access,
they said, pointing to the positive impact of technologies developed for
persons with functional limitations increasingly being applied to mainstream
products.

Bone conduction technology that can assist with hearing impairment can for
instance also be used in runners’ headsets.

Devices with brain-machine interface or eye movement recognition that help
people with cerebral palsy can also for example be used in gaming and
communications applications.

“Something that was considered to be a niche area and a specialised
product with a very high price starts going down,” Irene Kitsara, an
industrial property expert, told reporters.

“This has a benefit for all end-users.”

BSS/AFP/FI/ 1634 hrs