Portable Pathfinder
From Technology Review - October 2004 - page 17

For many people with brain injuries, mental retardation, or Alzheimers
disease, getting lost or disoriented is a common and distressing experience.
At the University of Washington, computer scientist Henry Kautzs team has
developed a system that uses cell phones to monitor users whereabouts and
help keep them on track. The phone, equipped with a GPS receiver that gauges
its location, communicates wirelessly with a PC running novel artificial
intelligence software. Based on about three weeks of data, the software
learns to predict daily behavior patterns, such as which bus a user takes.
Then, if the system thinks the user is, say, getting off at the wrong bus
stop, the phone sounds an alert and displays a text prompt on the screen -
including directions for getting home. Kautzs team plans to do tests next
spring, together with University of Washington researchers in rehabilitation
medicine. The software could be on the market within two years.  

Caption:
A simple interface helps people navigate to their choice of destinations.
(Courtesy of Henry Kautz)

