h a l f b a k e r yNo, not that kind of baked.
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Think I'll stick to ASL. (Actually, I won't since I don't know sign language either.) |
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It makes sense that by stimulating different parts of the hand in different ways one might be able to "hear" speech (and other types of sounds as well) using nerves in the hand. I doubt that it would work to "talk" using this method, since there are many fewer muscles than nerves in the hand, but if someone learns to "hear" others using this device, they can also "hear" themselves. This ought to make learning to talk much easier for a deaf person. You might even be able to get rid of the typical deaf person accent. |
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Sign language is good, but this technology (if it worked) could allow deaf people to interact much easier with hearing society. If it could be introduced early enough (incorporate it into some baby toy), a child might be able to learn to speak at a normal age. Imagine a baby holding this device and curiously exploring the different sensations it gave as they make different sounds. Imagine their delight as they hold this with one hand, and pound on a toy piano with the other... |
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Some refreshable Braille devices talk to you as you run your
finger across the pins - which brings up the question, why
then are not people who want to learn Braille and are
already audio-literate, taught to read Braille by being
allowed to read audio books by running their fingers across
the refresh able Braille display? |
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Also why aren't kids with other reading disabilities but who
are already audio-literate taught other literacies like text
literacy by a similar mapping of one literacy onto another. |
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Isnt this what computers are good at is this incremental
mapping thing? Couldn't you map just about anything like
for instance really subtle advertising onto anything else
that person already had a literacy in or an addiction to? |
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