Matt Walter, left, and Sachi Hemachandra, right, stand behind their robotic wheelchair. Dylan Love Working out of MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Matt Walter and Sachi Hemachandra have built something that could revolutionize the way people with progressive neurological conditions get from place to place — it's a robotic wheelchair that understands basic voice commands for navigating around a space.

After building a map of its surroundings and being taught the location of each room — where the kitchen is, where the bathrooms are — the wheelchair can understand natural, conversational language that the users feed it through a standard headset and microphone.

This includes direct commands ("Take me to the kitchen.") and more subtle input as well ("I'm hungry."). Even though it already knows the layout of its space, it also has rangefinders at approximately ankle height to ensure it doesn't bump into people or other obstacles.

The team employed Amazon's Mechanical Turk platform to help the wheelchair understand the wide variety of input it could get from users. Mechanical Turk is a service that lets you pay a small fee to have humans do things that computers can't yet do reliably, like write product descriptions or pick out the most aesthetically pleasing photograph from among a set. People on the other end of the service watched videos of the wheelchair carrying out a number of tasks, then came up with the possible commands that might have caused the action to be carried out.

For example, in response to a video of the wheelchair going into a bedroom, Mechanical Turk providers would type "Take me to the bedroom" or "Take me to bed" or "I'm tired" or whatever else is appropriate. This effectively builds out the wheelchair's vocabulary and makes sure it always knows what its users want to do.

This system will prove invaluable to people who retain the ability to speak but can't use a joystick to effectively steer their chair. With a quick verbal command, they're off to their destinations.

The wheelchair team is already working with The Boston Home, an area care center for people with progressive neurological diseases, to see how this technology can benefit its residents.

See the wheelchair in action below: