August 26th, 2008 by
Filed under: Wearables
It turns out that the tongue isn’t tied to the spinal cord (had we paid better attention in Bio101, we’d have known that), which goes a long way towards keeping it unimpared in the event of spinal cord injury. A team at Georgia Tech is developing a tongue-based apparatus for disabled people that, which not as elegantly packaged as the GRAViTONUS device we’ve seen earlier, fashions a pointing device from a small tongue-mounted magnet and sensors near the cheeks. The team has promised interactivity way beyond what can be done with “sip and puff” input methods; think “mouth replaces mouse” and you’ve got the idea. Hopefully Mavis Beacon tongue-typing and the incorporation of haptic feedback won’t be far behind.
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Posted in georgia tech, GeorgiaTech, disabled, tongue, magnet | No Comments »
July 30th, 2008 by
Filed under: Robots
So we had a choice: either we let scientists at the University of Sheffield attach electrodes to our tongues, or they were going to go and build their own artificial mouth. Because we’re not so into the whole electrode thing, they built “Anton,” an animatronic tongue made of soft silicone to help them understand speech and subsequently improve speech-recognition software. This isn’t the first of its kind, believe it or not — there’s much competition in the robotic mouth world. Because speech recognition systems aren’t really benefitting from simply crowding them full of recorded speech, researchers want to better understand how the mouth produces sound and then create algorythms that can simply recognize speech patterns rather than try to match recordings to recordings. Sounds about right to us. Peep the creepy video after the break.
Continue reading Anton the robotic tongue has saved you from electrode doom
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Posted in research, mouth, speech, tongue, university of sheffield, UniversityOfSheffield | No Comments »