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RERC APT Logo Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center on Accessible Public Transportation

A partnership between the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University and the IDEA Center at SUNY Buffalo

Our Team

Co-Directors

Aaron Steinfeld, PhD, is a Systems Scientist in the Robotics Institute, School of Computer Science, at Carnegie Mellon University. He holds three degrees in Industrial and Operations Engineering from the University of Michigan. Dr. Steinfeld is currently leading the QoLT Safe Driving Systems cluster of projects. This effort is on the complimentary issue of enhancing automobile accessibility for drivers who are disabled and/or older. He was a key member of RADAR, a very large project that sought to provide white collar assistance through machine learning.

Dr. Steinfeld, an Industrial Engineer with a specialization in human factors, has extensive experience designing, developing, and evaluating interfaces for complex, real-time rehabilitation, transportation, and machine learning systems. This includes work on real-time captioning, technology for people who are deaf or hard of hearing, personalized software assistants, driver-vehicle interfaces, driver assistance systems, fully and Robotics Institute / RERC on Accessible Public Transportation 135 semi-autonomous mobile robots, handheld interfaces for roadside crash documentation, product evaluations in continuing care facilities, bathroom accessibility, and a broad range of Intelligent Transportation Systems. An author of over two dozen peer reviewed publications, he is the lead author of Universal design in automobiles, a chapter in the Universal Design Handbook (2001) and author of Smart systems in personal transportation in the forthcoming Engineering Handbook on Smart Technology for Aging, Disability and Independence. He also has extensive personal experience with individuals with severe and profound hearing loss. He is a member of the Carnegie Mellon Minimal Risk IRB and the RERC on Telerehabilitation Advisory Board.

Jordana Maisel, PhD., is a Research Associate for the RERC-UD and Director of Outreach and Policy Studies at the IDEA Center. Ms. Maisel is an urban planner whose current work includes projects on the effectiveness of universal design, Visitability, policy and planning issues related to inclusive housing design, and an analysis of international accessibility standards and research. She recently completed an issue paper on Visitability for AARP. Ms. Maisel is Editor of the IDEA Center E-Newsletter, which has over 5000 subscribers. She recently developed and taught an online continuing education program for the RERC-UD and currently teaches in the Department of Urban and Regional Planning at UB as an Adjunct Professor.

Support Teams

Carnegie Mellon University

Aaron Steinfeld, PhD, is a Systems Scientist in the Robotics Institute, School of Computer Science, at Carnegie Mellon University. He holds three degrees in Industrial and Operations Engineering from the University of Michigan. Dr. Steinfeld is currently leading the QoLT Safe Driving Systems cluster of projects. This effort is on the complimentary issue of enhancing automobile accessibility for drivers who are disabled and/or older. He was a key member of RADAR, a very large project that sought to provide white collar assistance through machine learning.

Dr. Steinfeld, an Industrial Engineer with a specialization in human factors, has extensive experience designing, developing, and evaluating interfaces for complex, real-time rehabilitation, transportation, and machine learning systems. This includes work on real-time captioning, technology for people who are deaf or hard of hearing, personalized software assistants, driver-vehicle interfaces, driver assistance systems, fully and Robotics Institute / RERC on Accessible Public Transportation 135 semi-autonomous mobile robots, handheld interfaces for roadside crash documentation, product evaluations in continuing care facilities, bathroom accessibility, and a broad range of Intelligent Transportation Systems. An author of over two dozen peer reviewed publications, he is the lead author of Universal design in automobiles, a chapter in the Universal Design Handbook (2001) and author of Smart systems in personal transportation in the forthcoming Engineering Handbook on Smart Technology for Aging, Disability and Independence. He also has extensive personal experience with individuals with severe and profound hearing loss. He is a member of the Carnegie Mellon Minimal Risk IRB and the RERC on Telerehabilitation Advisory Board.

University at Buffalo: IDEA Center

Victor L. Paquet, Sc.D., is an Associate Professor of Industrial Engineering at UB. His current research activities include the development of an anthropometric database of wheelchair users and studies of the effects of products and environments on user kinematics. At the IDEA Center, Dr. Paquet is the Project Coordinator for the R2: Targeted Human Factors Studies for Design Practice for the RERC-UD. He previously co-directed the RERC-UD Prototype Anthropometric Database Study. He is also currently Co-Director of the Space Requirements for Wheeled Mobility Project for the U.S. Access Board. In 2003, he was awarded an ASSE fellowship. Dr. Paquet has published widely in the field of ergonomics and recently edited a special issue of the Journal of Industrial Ergonomics on the topic of Anthropometry and Disability.

Brittany Perez, OTD, OTR/L is an occupational therapist and Director of Outreach and Engagement at the Center for Inclusive Design and Environmental Access (IDeA) at the University at Buffalo in the School of Architecture and Planning. She earned her Clinical Doctorate in Occupational Therapy at Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine, with a research focus on universal design and social participation, and a she earned her B.S. in Psychology from Washington University in St. Louis.

At the IDeA Center, Ms. Perez coordinates product and environment usability studies and leads efforts for outreach and community engagement. She coordinates interdisciplinary research activities on both the Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center on Universal Design in the Built Environment (RERC-UD) and the RERC on Accessible Public Transportation (RERC-APT) at the Center.

Ms. Perez co-founded and co-directs the Age Friendly Erie County initiative, a collaborative community-based effort working to build creative partnerships for a more inclusive Western New York. Brittany is the Assistant Director for Community Outreach in the University at Buffalo’s Center for Successful Aging, and is an adjunct instructor in the department of occupational therapy.

Heamchand Subryan, M.Arch/MFA., has worked at the IDeA Center for five years while completing his dual degree program in architecture and media studies with an emphasis on introducing responsive information technologies into built environments. At the IDEA Center, his responsibilities include interactive technology development, and graphic, website, exhibit, and interactive design. He manages and maintains the IDeA Center, UD E-World, and GUDC, Inc. websites. He is responsible for the layout, visual appearance, usability and accessibility of these sites. He has extensive experience with Web 2.0 technologies including wikis, blogs and social networks such as Flickr and Facebook. Additionally, he is trained in the requirements of web accessibility and usability.

His work in interactive devices includes developing a commercial prototype of an interactive model that orients blind users in their environment for a major school for the blind in New England, and is currently in discussions with the Smithsonian Museum, currently seeking funding for development of similar technology for their visitors. He is prototyping a device for use in a home to control multiple appliances and commercial products, and has redesigned user interfaces for common home appliances for product development. He routinely assists members of the architecture and planning faculty in the development of exhibitions, displays and products requiring interactive technology. As a researcher, he is interested in wayfinding technologies for blind users, smart home technologies for elderly individuals, tactile interfaces, web usability and accessibility, accessible transportation, and universal and accessible design.

Jonathan White, M.Arch., is a Research Associate at the IDeA Center. He is an architectural researcher and designer with special expertise in ADA compliance, universal design, accessible design, graphic design, computer-aided design, and visualization techniques. He has lectured to local professionals and students on inclusive housing and design strategies and recently helped organize an accessibility track at a national housing conference. He manages the IDeA Center’s online continuing education program. He co-authored the book, Inclusive Hous-ing: A Pattern Book (W.W. Norton & Co.).

Danise Levine, RA., is the Assistant Director of the IDEA Center and was Director of Technical Assistance for the RERC-UD. She is also an Assistant Research Professor in the Departments of Architecture and Planning at UB. Ms. Levine is a licensed architect and has more than 13 years of architectural practice experience, with special expertise in the areas of ADA compliance, universal design, and accessible design. She recently completed designs for four newly constructed, universally designed homes, including two model homes. She is active in consulting on ADA compliance and regularly publishes articles in technical journals and books.

 

Consultants:

Anthony Tomasic, PhD, is the director of the MSIT-VLIS profession master degree program in Very Large Information Systems at Carnegie Mellon and a Senior Systems Scientist in the Institute for Software Research International. He is currently a project leader in the DARPA RADAR project that is building an intelligent desktop. His research interests focus on very large information systems and the application of machine learning to user interfaces. Dr. Tomasic has over 30 publications in international peer-reviewed conferences and journals and is an associate editor for the IEEE Transactions on Data and Knowledge Engineering. He has worked as an officerfor various internet start-ups and a researcher for Dyade, a research and development consortium established by Institute National de Researche en Informatique et en Automatic (INRIA) and the Group Bull, IBM Almaden Research Center, the European Computer-Industry Research Centre, and the Database Group at Stanford University. He earned an MS and a Ph.D. in Computer Science at Princeton University.