Re: Circuit that produces a tingling sensation in the fingers.

From: Spehro Pefhany (speffSNIP_at_interlogDOTyou.knowwhat)
Date: 12/10/04


Date: Fri, 10 Dec 2004 15:57:57 -0500

On Fri, 10 Dec 2004 20:31:18 +0000, the renowned John Woodgate
<jmw@jmwa.demon.contraspam.yuk> wrote:

>I read in sci.electronics.design that Rich Grise <rich@example.net>
>wrote (in <pan.2004.12.10.19.16.31.64580@example.net>) about 'Circuit
>that produces a tingling sensation in the fingers.', on Fri, 10 Dec
>2004:
>>I hope I'm not being impertinent, but how do you read newsgroups? With
>>your device we're talking about, or do you have talking software?
>
>The Royal National Institute for the Blind in UK has done an enormous
>amount of work on computer aids for blind people. Quite a few years ago,
>they has voice-operated writers (needed a lot of training, so not viable
>commercially) and readers. The readers would run at speeds far higher
>than normal speech and people were trained to understand at those
>speeds.

The human brain can interpret speech at a much higher speed than
people can speak clearly. There are devices that speed up voice
(essentially by stealing chunks of it, so that it doesn't increase in
pitch) and they are still understandable at much higher than normal
speeds. I wonder if there's a better algorithm that might be practical
today.

Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany

-- 
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