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Synapse ITS acquires Oko app for visually-impaired pedestrians

Oko uses smartphone camera and AI to help identify crossing signals
By Adam Hill July 21, 2025 Read time: 1 min
Users can simply point their phone camera towards crossing signals to interpret information (© Tctomm | Dreamstime.com)

Synapse ITS has acquired Oko, a navigation app designed specifically to help blind and visually-impaired pedestrians navigate intersections.

Synapse already owns Polara Enterprises, which specialises in accessible pedestrian signals and has its own app - PedApp - which allows users to hear crossing information and remotely activate pedestrian signals from their smartphone.

PedApp is available free, and Synapse says it will reinstate Oko as a free subscription "to make its services accessible to as many pedestrians as possible".

Oko uses the phone's camera and artificial intelligence to help identify pedestrian signals: users can simply point their phone camera towards crossing signals to interpret information - particularly helpful when ADA-compliant (Americans with Disabilities Act) and Prowag-compliant APS are not installed.

What can the Oko app do?

  • Provide feedback through beeps, spoken instructions, or vibrations for users with low vision.
  • Help pedestrians explore their environment, identify accessible spots, and find nearby amenities like restaurants and grocery stores.
  • AI is trained on thousands of crossing images, to recognise and interpret pedestrian signals.

As well as Polara - and now, Oko - Synapse owns Carmanah Technologies, Eberle Design (EDI), Diablo Controls,  Availed Technologies and GovComm.

For more information on companies in this article

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