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Disabled Live Second
Life
By Shelley Schlender
17 September 2008
Second Life is an internet-based simulation of reality -- a virtual
world with trees, buildings, animals and people. The people are animated
characters who participate in this digital world, each guided by a
real-world person who can make his or her "avatar" look and act however
they want. For someone with physical or emotional disabilities, this
chance to dream by way of a computer and high-speed internet connection
can be a healing and empowering experience. That's why many experts are
working to make the simulation environment more accessible to them. From
inside the virtual world of Second Life, Shelley Schlender reports.
Kruger's avatar,
Gentle Heron, dances with an avatar named Reverend Newchurch
Palm trees sway and
the evening sky turns pink, as a woman with golden curls dances in a
green party dress. Her name is Gentle Heron. A handsome man lifts her
for a pirouette. They make their way over to a woman named Unmasked
Shepherd, who's playing dance music on her electric piano. Nearby, a man
in a red T-shirt jumps into the air, and flies away. Another man turns
into a dragon. Gentle Heron watches it all serenely.
Watching the scene unfold on her computer screen is Alice Krueger, the
woman behind Gentle Heron. "I've got lots of friends in there. From all
over the world. Different kinds of people. [Being in Second Life is]
really fun." Krueger, who has multiple sclerosis, says that living
through her avatar, Gentle Heron, is a refreshing change from her
everyday life. "Here in this life I'm pretty much confined to my home
and this room," she points out. "I don't see adults. It's difficult to
go out and talk with people. It's really nice to be able to go out and
dance. I love to dance."
Alice Kruger has a
community of friends, and a mission, in Second Life
In real life, the flying man in the red T-shirt is Ron Sidell. Two years
ago, a rare illness paralyzed him so completely, he had to breathe
through a tube. "I was put on a ventilator, and I was [surgically fitted
with a tracheal breathing tube], and it was horrible." Even now, it's
hard for him to talk about because it's such a painful memory for him.
While Sidell has regained some ability to move, he spends most of his
time in a wheelchair. In Second Life, though, he gets to go everywhere,
and dance. "When I see my avatar dancing, the parts of my brain think
movement. They sometimes feel what their avatar is doing."
That makes sense to Mark Dubin, a neuroscientist and former University
of Colorado professor, who now designs virtual reality tools. He
explains that the "real life" feel of Second Life occurs because this
virtual world is different -- and much more -- than a video game.
Mark Dubin and his
avatar, ThreeDee Shepherd
"A fundamental
difference is that you have an avatar. You have a representative that is
you and responds to you. You move, it moves. You feel like you're there.
Literally your brain will show activity typical of what the avatar is
doing."
This makes Second Life a great place for learning virtually anything,
even dog training. Vitolo Rossini, who has a brain injury due to a
traffic accident, now teaches people - and their avatars - to work with
virtual dogs in Second Life. He puts special priority into training
people with disabilities. Thanks to these Second Life experiences, some
people gain the confidence to own a real dog.
Vitolo Rossini has
set up a virtual dog training school on a parcel of land in Second Life
Alice Krueger, whose Gentle Heron avatar often plays with
computer-generated animals, says that some virtual dogs behave, but her
favorite did not. "It would sometimes obey you and sometimes go off on
its own, and it would wander away, and you'd be calling it and calling
it, and then it would squat and poop," she says with a laugh. "It's very
realistic."
There are a variety of skills that people learn, and that Krueger
teaches, through Virtual Ability. The organization, based in Colorado -
as well as in Second Life - highlights the benefits of virtual worlds
for people with disabilities. Virtual Ability helps them learn how to
get around in Second Life, which often makes a positive difference in
their real life.
Virtual Ability helps disabled people in real life and in Second Life
Krueger recalls one
woman who had difficulty with ordinary social relationships and was
reluctant to have her avatar encounter other avatars. "So we had her
working with plants because it was non-threatening to her. She became a
landscaper, and our neighbors [in Second Life] saw that and hired her to
do their [virtual] property." Through these jobs in Second Life, the
woman learned to make a budget, create a timeline and interact with people.
With these skills, Krueger says, she got a real world job offer. "We
were so excited," Krueger says. "She was really excited too, because
this was her first job. Ever."
Mark Dubin, the University of Colorado neuroscientist, says that people
with disabilities often become isolated. He says Second Life can change
that ... and be fun. "Depression lifts, people become more excited and
interested. It's not that they learn to overcome [their disabilities],"
he stresses. "To use the proper phrase, they are differently abled, and
Second Life enables those differences to be functional."
Because Second Life can offer people so many friendships and teachable
moments, Alice Krueger says that more than 70 English-speaking groups
assist people with disabilities or health issues through Second Life,
and there are many support groups in other languages, as well. |