Science Friday - Making Chemistry More Accessible To Blind And Low-Vision People
Episode Date: February 22, 2024The field of chemistry is filled with visual experiences, from molecular diagrams to color-changing reactions to data displayed as peaks and waves on a spectrograph. Those experiences and representati...ons are not very accessible to blind and low-vision people. In a recent article in the journal Science Advances, a group of researchers describes using 3D printing to create translucent raised images known as lithophanes that can represent high-resolution chemical data in a tactile and visual form simultaneously.Biochemist Dr. Bryan Shaw joins Ira Flatow to discuss the approach, and other techniques and tools his lab group at Baylor University is developing to make the lab more accessible to blind and low-vision researchers—from specialized devices that assist in the loading of gels for protein electrophoresis, to tiny molecular models that are best experienced by putting them on the tongue.Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
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How can we improve the accessibility of chemistry?
We have to remake the lab from the tools in it to the way it's even designed to the way we behave in the lab.
We have to rebuild it to make it accessible to all these different types of people.
It's Thursday, February 22nd, George Washington's birthday.
Also, the birthday of Heinrich Hertz, as in frequency, and Johannes Bronstead of Acid Base Theory fame.
And on top of all that, it's Science Friday.
I'm SciFry producer Charles Bergquist.
the world of chemistry can be a very visual place.
You've got diagrams of molecules, a lab filled with rows of bottles and vials.
People might observe chemical reactions by watching for changing colors or searching for specific peaks on a graph.
Since those experiences all rely in large part on vision, they're less accessible to blind and low vision people.
Scientists are now working to make chemistry more accessible,
with techniques that include 3D printing that let students feel
the data.
Joining me now with Dr. Brian Shaw, he's a professor of biochemistry at Baylor University in
Waco, Texas, and one of the authors describing the touchy techniques in the journal Science
Advances. Welcome to Science Friday.
Hey, Ira, great to be here. Nice to have you. Okay, can you describe these tactile prints
for me? What do they like? Well, tactile graphics have been around for a while, but the
ones we're developing. Yes, they're tactile, but they're also visual. So they're universal.
They're what artists call lithophanes. So it is a tactile graphic that will project whatever you see
on the video screen as a tactile readout. But the material we make them up, it's a translucent,
not transparent, but translucent polymer. So if you hold them up to the light, like a room light,
they'll start glowing in this sort of picture perfect fashion that looks like just what you see on the video screen.
So as a sighted person, I can see the data and then my colleagues with blindness can fuel the data.
And we can basically sit around a table and talk about the exact same piece of high resolution data on the same level.
And you say high resolution. It has to be high resolution.
Well, a lot of the data that we've been printing are, for example, polyacrylamide.
shells or NMR spectra or mass spectra. So we want the noise in the data. The noise is a very
important part of data. We don't want sort of idealized schematic graphs of NMR or mass
spectra or anything. We want the real stuff. And so, yeah, this high resolution allows us to
get the data to everyone in its pure raw form. So when they feel it, they can feel the tiny
little parts there. Oh, yeah. I'll never forget. One of our collaborator,
is he's had blindness since he was born.
Hobie Wedler, he has a PhD in physical organic chemistry from UC Davis.
And the first time he felt noise, he freaked out.
He was like, I've been hearing about noise forever.
And it was really cool.
So he actually was the one who pointed that out to us, how important that is.
I mean, of course, we know it as scientists, but we take it for granted sometimes.
That is cool.
Okay, tell me how you actually make them.
I say they are 3D printed, correct?
Yeah, we are not gurus of 3D printing.
We're experimental protein biochemists, and we make them with the regular Forms lab 3D printer, commercially available.
They're about $3,500,000, $5,000.
And we made them accidentally, actually.
We started out with 3D imagery, making tiny little models.
Some of them were edible.
Some of them were made of dental resin.
You could put them in your mouth.
And we were doing 3D models.
And then we got to the 2D graphics and 2D data, like in a book.
book. And we thought that was going to be kind of boring. And so we started making these graphs.
And the student, the undergraduate at Baylor Juan Lopez, made the graphics so thin. So they would
print out quick and use less resin that they started glowing when we held them up to the light.
And so we thought we had invented the lithophane. But it turns out the Chinese probably invented
them in six or 700 AD using thin porcelain.
I want to pick up on something interesting that you said.
You said you put them in your mouth or some people put them in their mouths.
Why would you do that?
Well, so we have 2D images.
We make these little 2D tecto graphics, but we also have small little 3D tactile graphics.
And it turns out your tongue, you know, it's a muscular hydrostat, sort of like an octopus arm.
And it's your finest tactile sensor, the spatial acuity of your.
your tongues about half a millimeter.
Your fingertips are about one millimeter.
And your lips are really good too.
So, and it's a hydrostat, so it's squishy.
You can squish it into little binding pockets on a 3D model of a tiny protein or something.
And so you can sense things a little bit better than you can with your fingers, or at least some people can.
So we use all the tactile sensors, the fingers, the lips, the mouth.
And then, of course, the mouth gives you the ability to encode information.
about the model with flavor and stuff like that.
So we don't want to leave any tactile sensor behind.
That is really cool because I know, you know, you can eat something and feel a little
grain of sand even there.
That's how sensitive your mouth is.
Oh, yeah.
Think about like a Blackberry.
That has kind of the same bulbar topology as a protein model, right?
And yeah, you can feel that with your fingers.
But when you pop that thing into your mouth, it's just a whole new world.
And we've watched little kids with total blindness putting things in their mouth and sort of pausing and thinking about it a lot.
So that's kind of how we got the idea of watching kids with blindness play around.
My son's legally blind.
So that's kind of how we got into this.
Is that right?
Yeah.
My son was born with tumors in both of his eyes.
So we've always sort of lived in this world of visual impairment.
And even though we're regular biochemists, our work has just kind of shadowed.
his development and his needs.
And I know your lab does other sorts of accessibility work, too.
What are some of the other techniques you're experimenting with?
So the first part was, yeah, to make the data accessible, 2D and 3D data.
And we feel like we've got that nailed down.
We can make any data accessible to a person with blindness.
So now we're moving into the lab to make all the experimental tools accessible.
And we're sort of doing it one piece at a time.
And we've started out with the most common analytical tool in the life sciences, gel electrophoresis.
So we've created this cool little device that clamps onto a gel electrophoresis box for proteins.
And it allows people with blindness to load gels, which if you're in biochemistry, you can do that all day.
So it's cool.
We brought in a bunch of kids from the Texas School for the blind and visually impaired.
and we had them try to load the gels, you know, inject their samples in with the tiny little
pipettes. And of course it was impossible to do, but once we gave them this device, we call it
a Zamponia because it looks like a pan flute. Once we gave it to them, they were able to load
gels like Total Rock Stars. They got beautiful data. And it was pretty cool to see. Did you actually
have to make a device for them? Yeah, we did. A graduate student in the lab, Levi Garza, spent about
four months designing it, 3D printing prototypes, tinkering with it.
And he's got something that works beautifully.
So we'll be publishing that probably next year.
That's cool.
What about labels and things?
Do they have Braille on them or some kind of touchy-feely stuff?
Yep.
You can use braille.
One of our undergraduate students in the lab, Noah Cook, he has total blindness.
He likes to use these shape labels.
triangles, circles, squares, hexagons.
And he has his own little code in his notebook with a more descriptive explanation in Braille.
But he likes sort of simple, explicit graphics for his test tubes.
Yeah, how do the blind people in the lab help you make these better?
I mean, did they come up with suggestions?
You know, if you did this a little differently, I could feel it a little better.
Oh, they totally do.
We work with a bunch of people with blindness.
Some of them have PhDs and we're born with blindness.
Some of them develop blindness later.
Some of them are undergrads.
And from the beginning, the design, to the prototypes, to the testing, they're always telling us what they want.
And what's really cool is the end product ends up helping everyone.
I have 47-year-old eyes.
So it's kind of hard for me to load gels now, even though I'm not technically visually impaired.
but once we put this device on, it's super easy.
So that's kind of one of the cool things about universal design
when you build something that can work for everyone.
That is cool.
You know, I mentioned Braille before,
but I know a little bit about Braille,
and I think it could be a little bit confusing,
those little dots when you're talking about reading versus chemical nomenclature.
Oh, you're exactly right.
So first of all, only about 10% of people with blindness
this read Braille. So there is a Braille literacy challenge there. But you're right, a lone pair of
electrons looks like, I think it's B in Braille. And, you know, Lewis dot structures have some sort of
overlap with Braille. So it can get a little confusing. Tell me a little bit about the phrase
assistive technologies. You say that many of the instruments we see in the lab are actually
assistive technologies. What does that connote? Yeah. So,
So a really famous chemist with blind, it's Hobbes, I always like to point out, nobody can see atoms, right?
Nobody can see individual molecules.
They're below the diffraction limit of visible light.
So as chemists, we're always making assistive technology to help us visualize or see things that we are never going to see with our eyes.
So a synchrotron or an electron microscope or even an in a more machine or a mass spectrometer.
These are really all forms of assistive technology, things we make to help us overcome our limitations in perceiving our world.
So, you know, as chemists, we're kind of used to flying blind, I guess you'd say, thinking about things we're never going to be able to see.
And so, yeah, we're making assistive technology in the lab, like this little device that helps people with blindness load gels.
But we're also surrounded by assistive technology.
and we just don't always think of it that way.
But that's really what it is.
Do you think it's necessary to be completely independent in a lab?
No, I don't think so.
When we're training these students with blindness to be researchers,
to be able to test hypotheses experimentally,
I don't think they need to be totally independent.
I'm not totally independent in the lab.
I'm a tenured professor of biochemistry.
I don't really do the experiments anymore.
The graduate students do.
I analyze the data.
I walk through the lab every day.
I'm shocked.
I'm shocked.
Yeah, I'm a scientist, but I'm not.
And so we want to be able to train these students to be able to play their part,
to be able to contribute and to be able to test hypotheses, analyze data, and be part of
a scientific team, because that's what science is now.
we're all dependent on each other. Right. Now, you're experimenting and creating and pioneering these
techniques. Does any of this, so to speak, leak out of your lab into other people's labs so they can
do the same thing? It's starting to. I have a collaborator. Her name's Mona Mincara,
and she's been on some of our lithophane's papers as a contributor, as a co-opter. But I met her
after we did the mouth models, these tiny little models that go in your mouth.
And one day I was zooming with her.
And I saw some tiny little models with dental floss attached to them.
And they were clearly mouth models.
And I said, Mona, are you actually putting the models in your mouth?
She's like, yes, Brian.
I love it.
It's awesome.
So we haven't assessed how many people are using these tools, but we think it's leaking into other labs.
Wow. And because you're publishing research on this, other people are obviously paying attention.
Oh, they're paying attention. I actually just got an email this morning from a scientist from China who wants to collaborate.
So you're right. We're publishing this work in the top journals, and it's really cool that the scientific community is supportive.
Dr. Shaw, is chemistry better or worse suited to accessible research than other fields of science?
Well, it's both. It's better and it's worse. Historically, it's been probably the most exclusive
field where people with disabilities or blindness are warned. Stay out of the lab. It's too
dangerous. And that's changing now. But it's also the best field for people with blindness because
nobody can see atoms. Nobody can really see molecules. Biochemistry, chemistry,
a whole chunk of this field of science is creating assistive technology to help you, me, see things we can't see, whether it's a synchrotron or a x-ray crystal diffractor.
So it's historically one of the worst offenders, but it's got a lot of potential to be more inclusive.
Do you think that there's any way that AI, which is getting into everything, AI could make chemistry or science more inclusive?
Oh, sure.
AI with machine vision, being able to wave your camera in front of something and basically
identify it, whether it's text or structure or some object, it's totally going to help out in the
lab. A cool app now is Be My AI, which is allowing people with blindness to basically identify
things around them using their phone and AI. So it's going to play a huge role. AI and robotics.
So the future is bright. If you're a kid out there or a young person or an adult with blindness and you want to get in the lab, the future is a lot brighter than the past.
Let me give you my blank check question. If you had a blank check and you wanted to spend it on something that you really needed or to change the paradigm that you're working in, how would you use that money?
You had a blank check.
I would spend it growing what we're doing, scaling it up to include people with other disabilities or other diverse abilities, whether they be intellectual, psychological, physical, developmental.
Our world's becoming more science-based.
The economy is becoming more science-based.
And I just don't want to see anyone left out.
And people with different abilities, from people with blindness, to people with mobility disorders,
to people who are just slow learners, people with level two autism, level three autism.
I don't want them left out.
And we have to remake the lab from the tools in it to the way it's even designed to the way we behave in the lab.
We have to rebuild it to make it accessible to all these different types of people.
because it's not working for them right now.
And so that's what I do with the money.
Well, that would be money well spent, Dr. Shaw.
I hope you get it.
And I want to thank you for your work and for taking time to be with us today.
Thanks, Ira.
That's it for today.
Tomorrow, guest host Sophie Bushwick takes us on a tour of some of the top science stories from the week.
I'm SciFri producer Charles Berkwist.
Thanks for listening.
We'll see you tomorrow on Science Friday.
