This application claims priority to Italian Patent Application BO2011A000167 filed Mar. 31, 2011, the entirety of which is incorporated by reference herein.
This invention relates to an apparatus and a method for the game of baseball for the blind.
The game of baseball is particularly well-known and widespread all over world. In light of that, to make this sport accessible even to the blind, a variation on traditional baseball was developed for blind players (hereinafter referred to in this description with the term baseball for the blind).
The game of baseball for the blind is a sport similar to traditional baseball but has rules or devices specifically devised to allow blind people to be able to play that sport while having fun and in absolute safety.
For example, in baseball for the blind there is no pitcher. The ball is thrown into the air directly by the blind batter and the ball is of a special type able to emit sounds during its movement.
As is known, in baseball the players in the attacking team (the team with a batter at “home base”), in order to increase their score, move between the bases (“first base”, “second base”, “third base”) so as to travel a full circuit of the field (diamond) without being eliminated.
One of the main difficulties encountered by the blind is that linked to movement—at running speed—from one base to the next.
Until now, that problem was solved by having sighted people on the field who, by providing indications of various kinds (clapping their hands, or objects such as paddles, etc.), guide the blind player from one base to the next.
However, such indications are not always suitable and effective for that purpose.
The article by Robert W. Massof relative to the International Conference on Auditory Display, Boston, Mass., USA, 6-9 Jul. 2003 illustrates a system comprising a sound base which is activated after the blind player has hit the ball.
The disadvantage of that system is that it does not allow optimum guidance. In fact, the blind player may have difficulty reaching the base if he uses only the sound indication.
Therefore, the aim of this invention is to overcome these disadvantages by providing a base and an apparatus for the game of baseball for the blind which allows a blind player to move along the field in an effective and precise way.
Accordingly, this invention achieves that aim with an apparatus comprising the technical features described in one or more of the appended claims.
The technical features of this invention, according to the above-mentioned aims, may be clearly inferred from the content of the appended claims, and the advantages of this invention are more apparent from the detailed description which follows, with reference to the accompanying drawings, which illustrate a non-limiting embodiment of the invention provided by way of example only, in which:
In
According to the invention, the apparatus 1 comprises a base 2 for the game of baseball for the blind which in practice is positioned close to one of the “bases” of the playing field (for example at “first base” B1 of the playing field CG).
The base 2 comprises a loudspeaker 4, designed for sound reproduction, that is to say, to generate a sound.
According to the invention, the loudspeaker 4 more generally forms sound reproduction means 3. In fact, the loudspeaker 4 may be substituted with a buzzer or any other electroacoustic device able to generate a sound.
The base 2 also comprises a control and operating unit 5, connected to the sound loudspeaker 4 (that is to say, to the sound reproduction means 4) for activating sound generation by the loudspeaker 4.
The base 2 also comprises a battery 6 and a battery charger 7 which can be connected to an electric mains network 8 to allow the battery 6 to be recharged.
More generally, the battery 6 forms means 9 for powering both the control and operating unit 5 and the active electronic components of the base 2 (e.g.: loudspeaker 4, etc.).
It should be noticed that the apparatus 1 also comprises a control device 10, which can be activated by a user—who is normally a prompter not a player, and is sighted —, or preferably an umpire, for sending a control signal s1 to the control and operating unit 5.
Preferably, the control signal s1 is a logic signal (even more preferably binary).
It should be noticed that the control and operating unit 5 is designed to activate the emission of a sound as a result of receiving the control signal s1.
Alternatively, according to another embodiment, the control signal s1 is an analogue signal and the control and operating unit 5 is designed to generate a sound depending on the actual value of the analogue signal s1.
It should be noticed that according to that embodiment it is possible, using the analogue signal s1, to modulate the sound emitted by the loudspeaker 4 in such a way as to provide a guiding indication to the blind player as he moves at a run (for example guiding information useful to the blind player in order to understand whether or not he is travelling along the correct trajectory).
However, irrespective of the type of signal s1 (logic or analogue) one advantage of the apparatus 1 is that the control device 10 allows the sighted user to provide guiding indications which are useful to the blind player, after training the blind player to associate a predetermined instruction with a particular sound or sound frequency.
For example, the user may generate an intermittent sound if the blind player is on the correct trajectory towards the base (in that case the instruction associated with this sound is “keep running in the same direction”) or a continuous or low frequency sound if the blind player is not on the correct trajectory (in which case the instruction associated with this sound is “change the direction you are running in”). In that way, the sighted user can guide the blind player towards the base.
It should be noticed that such a system is particularly effective and allows blind players to be guided to the base substantially with greatly reduced margins of error.
Activation of sound emission, depending on reception of the control signal s1, can be programmed according to three different modes:
It should be noticed that such operating modes (i, ii and iii) can be set by suitably selecting/programming the control and operating unit 5, for example by setting a dip-switch.
It should be noticed that the control device 10, according to a first embodiment, comprises a control push-button 11 which is electrically connected to the control and operating unit 5, for sending the control signal s1.
It should be noticed that, preferably, the control push-button is connected to the control and operating unit 5 by a cable (having any length).
It should also be noticed that the expression “control push-button” shall also be understood to mean a switch or lever or more generally an element which can be operated by the user to send the control signal s1 to the control and operating unit 5.
According to a second embodiment of the control device 10, the device 10 comprises a remote control unit 12, equipped with means for wirelessly transmitting the control signal s1 to the control and operating unit 5 (preferably using radio waves).
The control device 10 is equipped with the control push-button, which can be activated by the user for sending the control signal s1 to the control and operating unit 5.
According to that embodiment, the control and operating unit 5 is equipped with wireless receiver means 14 for the control signal s1.
It should be noticed that in
It should be noticed that the presence of the control push-button allows a sighted person to guide a blind player towards the base, after the blind player has been trained to associate a predetermined instruction with a predetermined sound (as described above).
Moreover, another technical effect associated with the control device equipped with the control push-button is that it is possible to generate a sound depending on the distance between the blind player and the base. For example, it is possible for the control push-button user to generate a continuous sound when the blind player is far from the base and to increase the frequency of the sound as the player gets closer to the base.
According to another aspect, the control device equipped with the control push-button allows a sighted user to generate a sound at a preset frequency depending on the blind player. That may allow the generation of a continuous or intermittent sound at a predetermined frequency, depending on the blind player (that sound is generated so as to favor the hearing sensitivity of the blind player).
Preferably the wireless receiver means 14 for the control signal s1 comprise a superheterodyne receiver device.
The following is a description, by way of example and without limiting the scope of the invention, of operation of the apparatus 1 with reference to positioning of the apparatus 1 at “first base” B1 of the playing field CG.
The blind batter, after validly hitting a ball, starts his run from “home base” B0 towards “first base” B1.
A user U1—normally an umpire—positioned on the playing field CG sends a control signal s1 to the control and operating unit 5.
It should be noticed that the control and operating unit 5 controls the loudspeaker 4 in such a way that the latter generates a sound, which can be heard by the blind runner.
The blind runner, thanks to the sound generated by the loudspeaker 4, is therefore guided on his run from “home base” B0 towards “first base” B1 with extreme precision and accuracy.
It should be noticed that, even in the presence of noise constituting interference, the blind player easily makes out the sound emitted by the loudspeaker 4.
In fact, preferably and advantageously, the sound emitted by the loudspeaker 4 is an intermittent sound (that is to say, a sound pulse), which can be easily distinguished from other sounds.
According to another aspect of the invention, the control and operating unit 5 comprises means 15 for setting the sound.
Said means 15 for setting the sound are designed to allow adjustment of the sound emitted by the loudspeaker.
Preferably the sound setting means 15 allow adjustment of the duration of the pulse (correlated to the frequency of the sound).
Preferably the sound pulses have a duration of between 200 ms and 2000 ms.
It should be noticed that, advantageously, the presence of means 15 for setting the sound allows the sound to be set for two or more bases 2 in such a way as to allow players to distinguish between one base and another. That allows a first base 2 to be positioned at “first base”, a second base 2 at “second base” and a third base 2 at “third base”.
It should be noticed that, preferably, the apparatus 1 comprises a box-shaped container 16.
The box-shaped container 16 is designed to house the components of the base 2, that is to say the battery 6, the battery charger 7, the control and operating unit 5 and the loudspeaker 4.
In particular, according to a preferred embodiment, the battery 6, the battery charger 7 and the control and operating unit 5 are fixed to the box-shaped container 16 while the loudspeaker 4 can be removed from the container 16.
It should be noticed that the container 16 can easily be transported by a user, in such a way that the apparatus 1 can be removed from the playing field CG at the end of the game.
Advantageously, that allows the loudspeaker 4 to be positioned in an area of the playing field CG in which it forms one (B1, B2, B3) of the bases of the playing field CG and the box-shaped container 16 to be positioned at a distance from the loudspeaker 4, with the double advantage of preventing the blind player from bumping into the box-shaped container 16 during his run and of allowing the blind player to identify with great precision the exact position of the base (B1, B2, B3) of the playing field CG.
According to another aspect, the loudspeaker 4 is positioned inside a protective body 17 (usually rigid). It should be noticed that, advantageously, the body 17 allows the loudspeaker to be protected when it is positioned in the exact physical position of one of the bases (B1, B2, B3) of the playing field CG.
The protective body 17 can preferably be removed from the box-shaped container 16.
It should be noticed that, preferably, placed on top of the protective body 17 there is a pad 20 (illustrated in
The invention described above is susceptible of industrial application and may be modified and adapted in several ways without thereby departing from the scope of the inventive concept. Moreover, all the details of the invention may be substituted by technically equivalent elements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2011A0167 | Mar 2011 | IT | national |
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Entry |
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Massof Robert W: “Auditory assistive devices for the blind” In: “Proceedings of the 2003 International Conference on Auditory Display”, Jul. 6, 2003, XP002664985, pp. 271-275. |
Italian Search Report dated Dec. 2, 2011 from counterpart application. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120252608 A1 | Oct 2012 | US |