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Provides Body Part Tracking Without Touch

The welcome page of the Eyetwig iTracker. It has a brown background with a white font and a webcam pic of a man with a green square drawn around his head. The text says to start tracking by clicking the "Track" option from the menu bar or to use "Preferences". An arrow points to a drawing of an eye on the menu bar in the top header.

Head control software for Mac that requires no calibration, no teaching/learning/practice but works by identifying and tracking the movements of the user's head only.

A woman with her face outlined in white to demonstrate the tracking gesture.

A Mouse control software that was designed to support the less experienced audience in the world of the web or those with motor difficulties that make the use of mouse and keyboard complex.

A spreadsheet of with various colors of cells and entries.

Software aimed at users who can and want to work independently with text and computer, and also have sufficient (head) coordination skills to control the mouse pointer.

The side-view of a young boy sitting in front of a computer with a colorful screen image of people standing in the grass. The user has electrodes on his temple and forehead.

A mouse replacement system that enables communication and learning primarily for individuals whose only controlled muscular movement is their eyes. 

Software logo featuring a cartoon image of a smiling face on a computer mouse.

A mouse assistive device that adapts itself to the person’s movements, which makes it suitable for people with cerebral palsy and other motorial disabilities.

Angled view of rectangular black electronic device with a display showing control button choices and sound indicators.

A touch-free music system designed to allow people with physical or developmental disabilities to create music by using sensor technology to translate body movement into sounds.

Black device resembling a headband or visor, with two arms that fit over the user's ears. A cable with a blue bite tip at the end is attached to the device.

Bluetooth alternative mouse designed to be worn like a pair of glasses.

4C eye tracking bar mounted to bottom of PC screen.

The Tobii Eye Tracker 4C attaches to the bottom of a computer screen and complements the use of a keyboard and mouse, enabling people to use their gaze as an additional input for computer interactions and gaming and increased accessibility.

Glasses-like item with controls housed on right arm

Vuzix M300 Smart Glasses delivers a “hands free” digital world, providing access to information, data collection and more.

A person on the webcam screen with computer lines outlining eyebrows and mouth.

A next-gen head mouse with face gesture control via a simple webcam.  Move the mouse with gentle head motions; click, scroll and drag by smiling or dwell. No stickers-on-face, sip-and-puff or head switches are required. Hands-free mouse control.