Baker Paul M A, Moon Nathan W
Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center on Wireless Technologies (Wireless RERC), Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia 30332-0620, USA.
Assist Technol. 2008 Fall;20(3):149-56. doi: 10.1080/10400435.2008.10131942.
The near universal deployment in the United States of a wide variety of information and communications technologies, both wired and wireless, creates potential barriers to use for several key populations, including the poor, people with disabilities, and the aging. Equal access to wireless technologies and services can be achieved through a variety of mechanisms, including legislation and regulations, market-based solutions, and awareness and outreach-based approaches. This article discusses the results of policy research conducted by the Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center on Wireless Technologies (Wireless RERC) using policy Delphi polling methodology to probe stakeholders' opinions on key access barrier issues and to explore potential policy responses. Participants included disability advocates, disability/wireless technology policy makers, and product developers/manufacturers. Respondent input informed subsequent development of potential policy initiatives to increase access to these technologies. The findings from the Delphi suggest that awareness issues remain most important, especially manufacturer awareness of user needs and availability of consumer information for selecting the most appropriate wireless devices and services. Other key issues included the ability of people with disabilities to afford technologies and inadequacies in legislation and policy making for ensuring their general accessibility, as well as usefulness in emergencies. Technical issues, including interoperability, speech-to-text conversion, and hearing aid compatibility, were also identified by participating stakeholders as important. To address all these issues, Delphi respondents favored goals and options congruent with voluntary market-driven solutions where possible but also supported federal involvement, where necessary, to aid this process.
在美国,有线和无线的各种信息与通信技术几乎得到了普遍应用,这给包括穷人、残疾人和老年人在内的几个关键人群使用这些技术造成了潜在障碍。通过多种机制,包括法律法规、基于市场的解决方案以及基于宣传推广的方法,可以实现对无线技术和服务的平等接入。本文讨论了无线技术康复工程研究中心(Wireless RERC)采用政策德尔菲投票法进行政策研究的结果,以探究利益相关者对关键接入障碍问题的看法,并探索潜在的政策应对措施。参与者包括残疾权益倡导者、残疾/无线技术政策制定者以及产品开发者/制造商。受访者的意见为随后制定旨在增加这些技术接入机会的潜在政策举措提供了参考。德尔菲调查的结果表明,认知问题仍然最为重要,尤其是制造商对用户需求的认知以及消费者在选择最合适的无线设备和服务时获取信息的情况。其他关键问题包括残疾人购买技术的能力,以及在确保其普遍可及性和在紧急情况下的实用性方面立法和政策制定的不足。参与的利益相关者还指出,包括互操作性语音转文本转换和助听器兼容性在内的技术问题也很重要。为解决所有这些问题,德尔菲调查的受访者倾向于在可能的情况下采用与自愿市场驱动解决方案相一致的目标和选项,但在必要时也支持联邦政府参与以推动这一进程。