How can AI be made more accessible to people with disabilities?
Artificial Intelligence is playing a growing part in modern life but it can’t recognise and then adapt to special needs as humans would
Artificial Intelligence is playing a growing part in modern life. We’re told it can make things faster, more efficient and cheaper.
But people with disabilities can struggle to use machines which use AI because they don’t recognise their special needs and adapt to them. Instructions are often visual – making it impossible for a blind person to use without the assistance of someone else.
A number of African countries have AI strategies but in Nigeria this is still being discussed – and so people with disabilities there are pressing for their needs to be recognised within any legislation.
For today’s Africa Daily, Alan hears from journalist Gbenga Ogundare, Olufemi Bayode, a teacher at Kings College, and Opeolu Akinola, an ICT consultant and the co-founder of the Microsoft Experience Centre in Lagos. All three are blind.
Podcast
-
Africa Daily
One question to wake up to every weekday morning. One story from Africa, for Africa