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References
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Prof. Judith Tamburlin and Prof. Charles Severin,
Departments of Clinical Laboratory Science & Anatomy and Cell Biology,
State University of New York at Buffalo,
310A Sherman Hall,
Buffalo, New York, 14214.
716-898-5196, 829-2912.
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Contact Dr. John D. Brule, jdbrule@cat.syr.edu,
Professor Emeritus of Electrical and Computer Engineering,
121 Link Hall,
Syracuse University,
Syracuse, NY 13244, for information about his use of computerized
milling machines for producing molds.
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- Contact Prof. Karen Luxton-Gourgey,
Baruch College,
Computer Center for the Visually Impaired.
Office: 212 447 3070, for information about her use of
computerized milling machines for producing molds.
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- Contact
Prof. Guangming Zhang,
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
University of Maryland,
College Park, MD.
tel: 301 405-3565,
FAX: 301 314-9920,
e-mail: zhang@isr.umd.edu, for information about his use of
computerized milling machines and stereolithography to make molds.
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- Tactile Vision, Inc,
2375 Saugeen Rd,
Oakville, Ontario CANADA L6H5X9,
tel: 905 257 1582,
e-mail: eanczur@pathcom.com.
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- Contact Dr. Marie Knowlton, Department of Educational
Psychology, University of Minnesota, 214 Burton Hall, 178 Pillsbury Drive,
S.E.Minneapolis, MN 55455 (612) 626-1859. e-mail address:
knowl001@maroon.tc.umn.edu. For a handling charge of $3.50 she will
send a version of the MacIntosh MacPaint program that includes braille
letters. This program can produce graphics to be reproduced on swell
paper.
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- Excerpt from an oral presentation at the Symposium on
High-Resolution Tactile Graphics, held as part of the CSUN
International Conference on Technology and Persons with Disabilities,
March 15, 1994. Proceedings of this symposium are available by ftp
from TRACE.WISC.EDU as paper 10%5fmagar.txt in the
/pub/txt/tactile directory. These papers are also available on
the world wide web at http://www.trace.wisc.edu.
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- For up-to-date information about the Science
Access Project, see the world wide web site URL http://dots.physics.orst.edu.
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``Dotsplus--better than braille?'', John A. Gardner,
published in Proceedings of the 1993 International
Conference on Technology and Persons with Disabilities, Los
Angeles, CA, March, 1993. Also see discussion on WWW at
http://dots.physics.orst.edu
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- For information on the International Committee on
Accessible Document Design, contact
Michael G. Paciello,
131 D.W. Highway #618,
Nashua, NH. 03060,
Phone: (603) 598-9544,
Email: mpaciello@webable.com.
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- For up-to-date information about the Science
Access Project's add-on to SCREEN, see the world wide web site
URL http://dots.physics.orst.edu.
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- ``Scientific Reading and Writing by Blind
People--Technologies of the Future'', Hadi Bargi-Rangin, William A. Barry, John
A. Gardner, Randy Lundquist, Mark Preddy, and Norberto Salinas,
published in Proceedings of the 1996 International Conference on
Technology and Persons with Disabilities, sponsored by California
State University Northridge, March 19, 1996, Los Angeles. Can be
found on WWW at http://dots.physics.orst.edu or
http://www.isc.rit.edu/easi/easisem/gardnerj.html.
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- The GS notation is a compact linear representation for
math equivalent to that used in the TeX languages. This notation has
a one to one correlation with the GS dual 6/8-dot braille code
developed by the author and Norberto Salinas, Prof. of Mathematics,
University of Kansas. For a discussion of GS and its relationship to
the uniform braille code development by the International Committee on
English Braille, see the WWW site http://dots.physics.orst.edu.
Mark Preddy
Mon May 20 12:49:13 PDT 1996