New Ring Device 'Reads' Sign Language Out Loud
Nov. 21, 2013
By GILLIAN MOHNEY
The Red Dot 2013 design award went
to Asia University contestants who designed the Sign Language Ring, a set of
rings and a bracelet that detects sign language motions and translates them to
voice. It also translates voice to text.
Red Dot Design Award
A new device will let people who
communicate through sign language to translate
their hand movements into spoken words.
The Sign Language Ring created by
six designers from Asia University won one of the coveted 2013 Red Dot Design Concept Awards,
an international competition that received more than 15,500 applications.
The device, which actually
incorporates multiple rings and two bracelets, was inspired by Buddhist prayer
beads.
The rings "read" the hand
movements of sign language and the bracelets then transmit or "speak"
those words out loud. If another person responds verbally, the device can
translate the voice to text that appears on the bracelet.
Users can also pre-record certain
movements to customize their device and develop conversational shortcuts, or
even slang.
But some people in the deaf
community have reservations about the device's ability to fully translate sign
language.
Guillaume Chastel, senior lecturer
in the American Sign Language Department at the University of Rochester in New
York, said that unlike a live interpreter, the device could make mistakes in
translating his sign language.
Chastel recognizes, however, that a
live interpreter is not always available, and that the Sign Language Ring
device could help deaf people with such activities as running errands.
"We do use gestures or write
notes ... [but] writing back and forth takes so long," said Chastel about
communicating while at a store. "If you're doing something basic and you
can throw on these bracelets, that would be a good option."
Others worry that the device could
miss crucial information conveyed in the face or in the movements of the person
signing.
Howard Rosenblum, the CEO of the National
Association of the Deaf, said in a statement that association
officials worried about the accuracy of the device.
"American Sign Language
encompasses more than what would be measured in the wrist and fingers. ASL
relies on wrist movements, handshapes, finger-spelling, body movements and
facial expressions," said Rosenblum, who emphasized that he had not seen
the device. "The National Association of the Deaf encourages the
developers of this emerging technology to work with the deaf and
hard-of-hearing community, and the hearing community, to ensure that their
innovative product meets our needs."
According to the National Institute on Deafness and
Other Communication Disorders, two to three of every 1,000 children
in the United States are born deaf or hard-of-hearing.
Nine out of 10 children born deaf
have parents who can hear.
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/ring-device-reads-sign-language-loud/story?id=20963684
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