Judith M. Dixon, a clinical psychologist by training and a sophisticated techie by avocation, is helping to lead the Library of Congress into the digital age. Dixon, 55, who gave up university teaching 27 years ago to join the librarys National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, is a key player on a team working to create a new generation of audiobooks for the librarys more than 700,000 registered blind and disabled users. The goal is to make the digital format the backbone of the librarys talking book program by transferring onto special digital flash drives the 60,000 titles that the library has on audiocassettes and giving patrons new machines on which to play them. Read more about the program in The Washington Post online.
Posted by Louise Ash on 06 March 2008 in Special Needs