Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

App that enables deaf people to 'hear'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Oct, 2014 07:55 AM
    In pleasant news for the hearing impaired, researchers have developed a new app called Transcense which transcribes speech into written words that consequently show up on the smartphone screen.
     
    Transcense is the brainchild of four graduate students from the University of San Francisco and Berkeley, who have all been affected by hearing loss in different ways.
     
    "Transcense brings meaning to the conversation and allows the deaf person to actively engage again," the creators said.
     
    Transcense is the first mobile app that makes group conversations effortless between deaf people and their hearing peers.
     
    Transcense transcribes a group conversation and uses a voice recognition algorithm to detect individual voices and link each of them with a colour, which makes it easy for the app's user to see who is talking on their smartphone screen.
     
    A deaf person can also use the app to speak for them using a digital voice, or to get the attention of all the people present, via their smartphones, Daily Mail reported.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    New optical device to help find Earth-like planets

    New optical device to help find Earth-like planets
    "We are building a telescope that will let us see the Sun the way we would see other stars," said David Phillips, staff scientist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.....

    New optical device to help find Earth-like planets

    Want to Know How to Make $500,000 a year on Twitter? Read This

    Want to Know How to Make $500,000 a year on Twitter? Read This
    By just tweeting out facts to his seven million-plus followers, a 23-year-old youngster here is making $500,000 a year.

    Want to Know How to Make $500,000 a year on Twitter? Read This

    User history to make websites more interactive

    User history to make websites more interactive
    Small cues that display a user's transaction history may help a website feel almost as interactive as chatting with an online customer service agent, paving the way...

    User history to make websites more interactive

    '3D printing 'technology of the future'

    '3D printing 'technology of the future'
    Three-dimensional printing, sensors, the cloud and personalisation are "the future in technology," according to Amar Hanspal, vice president of the San Rafael, California-based Autodesk manufacturing company.

    '3D printing 'technology of the future'

    Control your smartphone with hand gestures

    Control your smartphone with hand gestures
    With a new app developed by Swiss researchers, users can now control their smartphones with gestures resembling sign language....

    Control your smartphone with hand gestures

    Smartphone app for the visually impaired launched

    Smartphone app for the visually impaired launched
    An application equipped with Braille typing feature that promises to assist the visually-impaired in using all features of a smartphone was launched...

    Smartphone app for the visually impaired launched