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Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010
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Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

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Page 1: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Technology for Deaf People

Richard LadnerIntroduction to Deaf Studies

ASL 305Spring, 2010

Page 2: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 2

Outline

• Background and terminology• Hearing technology• Texting• Video Phone• Web• Other Technology• Research

Page 3: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 3

Who Are Deaf People

• Born or became deaf before language development.› 10% have deaf parents› 90% have hearing parents

• Became deaf after language development.

• Became deaf in old age.

Page 4: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 4

Models of Deafness

• Medical Model› Deaf people are patients who need treatment and/or cure.

• Special Education Model› Deaf youth need special education.

• Rehabilitation Model› Deaf people need assistive technology for employment and

everyday life.• Legal Model

› Deaf people are citizens who have rights and responsibilities like other citizens. Accessibility to voting, television, and telephone are some of those rights.

• Social Model› Deaf people are part of the diversity of life, not necessarily in

need of treatment and cure. They do need access when possible.

Page 5: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 5

Deaf or deaf

• deaf with lower case “d”› Severe hearing loss that may happen in aging› No sign language› Prefers to enhance hearing, if possible

• Deaf with upper case “D”› Member of the Deaf Community› Uses sign language socially and possibly at work› May use hearing aids or other devices to enhance

hearing› Culturally Deaf

Page 6: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

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Technology

• Prosthesis› Augmentation to restore lost function. Cure or partial cure.

Examples: hearing aids, cochlear implants

• Assistive technology› Popular in rehabilitation literature. Emphasis on the need for

assistance.

• Access technology› Allows an activity that would be difficult to impossible to

achieve without it. Emphasis not on restoring function, but on achieving an end goal by whatever means possible.

› Examples: text messaging, video phones, captions

Page 7: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 7

Hearing Technology

• Hearing Aids• FM Systems• Cochlear Implants

Page 8: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 8

Latest Hearing Aid

• Lyric

Page 9: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 9

FM Systems

• Personal• Public (Opera House, …)

Personal FM System

Page 10: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 10

Cochlear Implant

“Normal” ear Implanted ear

Page 11: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 11

The Telephone

• The telephone was invented by A.G. Bell in his efforts to improve the lives of deaf people.

• His mother and wifewere deaf.• His father was a pioneer in speechtraining.

A.G. Bell1880

Page 12: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 12

Alexander Graham Bell

• Bell was very influential on public policy about deafness.› He was a strong advocate of oralism.› He advised the deaf not to marry each

other and have children to help eliminate deafness.

› His telephone was not used by the deaf until the invention of the acoustic modem and TTY.

Page 13: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 13

Texting

• TTY• TTY Relay Service• Captioned Telephone• E-mail• Instant Messaging• Captions

Page 14: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 14

TTY (Teletypewriter)

TTY circa 1970 Modern TTY with built-in acoustic modem

Page 15: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 15

TTY Relay Service

Page 16: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 16

Captioned Telephone

Page 17: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 17

Robert H. Weitbrecht

• Deaf man who invented the acoustic modem in the 1960s so that he could use the telephone through a TTY.

• Over 20 years the idea caught on so that by 1980 the Deaf world was connected by TTYs.

• TTY relay services were created so that Deaf people could communicate with hearing.

• TTY laws in almost every state require the telephone company to provide a TTY to every deaf customer.

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Deaf Technology 18

History of the TTY

Author: Harry Lang

Page 19: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 19

E-Mail / Instant Messaging

Sidekick

Page 20: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 20

Closed Captions

Page 21: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 21

Closed vs. Open Captions

• Closed Captions› Optional

• Open Captions› Always on the screen› Like subtitles for foreign language films

• Leader - WGBH Media Access Group

Page 22: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

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Closed Captioning

• Line 21 of the vertical blanking interval of a TV band was basically unused before 1970.

• The National Bureau of Standards was mandated to look for a way to provide closed captions using this band.

• In 1980 the first broadcasts of a regular series were captioned by ABC.

• Today all TVs must have a built-in caption decoder.

• Today real-time and off-line captioning of media is a large industry.

• Captioning of web video is a current problem.

Page 23: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 23

YouTube Auto-Captioning

• Auto-captioning› Speech → captions

• Auto-synchronization› Speech + transcript → captions› Much better

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTvHIDKLFqc

Page 24: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 24

Captionfish

Demo

DeafCode LLC

Page 25: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 25

Video

• Video Phone• Video Relay Service (VRS)• Video Remote Interpreting (VRI)• MobileASL (UW Project)

Page 26: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 26

Picturephone

“Picturephone” demonstrated by AT&T at the 1964 World’s Fair

› Required too much bandwidth for phone system› Deaf world excited then disappointed

Page 27: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 27

Video Phone

Page 28: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 28

More Video Phones

Viable Purple

Page 29: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 29

Ubiquitous Video Phones

Skype Windows Live Instant Messenger

Page 30: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 30

Video Relay Service (VRS)

© Sorenson

Page 31: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

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VRS

• VRS is a free service to deaf people in the US.› Paid for by Universal Access Tax

• Major companies› Sorenson› Purple› ZVRS› Snap

Page 32: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 32

Video Remote Interpreting (VRI)

Page 33: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

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Challenges:› Limited network bandwidth› Limited processing power on cell phones

MobileASL› ASL communication using video cell phones over

current U.S. cell phone network

Page 34: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 34

MobileASL Platform

• HTC TyN IICamera facingin the right direction

Page 35: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 35

Modern Video Phone

• Sorenson was the pioneer• Many other companies in the field• Relay service• Point-to-point• Computer based or TV with set top box• Broadband required• Free for broadband deaf users in most

states.

Page 36: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 36

The Web

• Vlogs (Video Web Logs)• Social Networking• ASL-STEM Forum (UW Project)

Page 37: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 37

Vlogs

Page 38: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 38

Social Networking

Page 39: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 39

Page 40: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

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ASL–STEM ForumSocial Networking for a Purpose

• Enable ASL to grow into Science.• Empower more deaf students to go into

advanced science fields.• Leverages the interest in the video

enabled web.

Page 41: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 41

Page 42: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 42

Sign Video

Rating

Discussion

SearchableIndex

Demo

Page 43: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 43

Deaf-blind Technology

TeleBraille (1984)TTY with Braille output

DeafBlind Communicator (2009)• face-to-face• TTY• SMS

Page 44: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 44

Other Technologies

• Doorbell light• Phone ringer light• Fire alarm light• Baby monitor light or vibrator• Alarm clock light or vibrator

Page 45: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 45

Research

• Sign Language Recognition• Sign Language Activity Recognition• Signing Avatars

Page 46: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 46

Sign Language Recognition

Thad StarnerGeorgia Tech

Christian VoglerGallaudet

Page 47: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 47

Compression Features for Activity Recognition

Type of macroblock Motion vectors

Page 48: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 48

Signing Avatars

Vcom3D Demo

Page 49: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

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Unsolved Research Problems

• Sign Language Recognition› From video or even more sensors

• Sign Language Translation› To or from sign language

• Useful Avatars› Not natural enough› Facial expressions poor› Motion capture not perfect

• Speaker independent speech recognition for automatic captioning

Page 50: Technology for Deaf People - University of Washington · Technology for Deaf People Richard Ladner Introduction to Deaf Studies ASL 305 Spring, 2010. ... • Special Education Model

Deaf Technology 50

Technology Classes

• Bottom-up technology - TTY, VRS› Start from a small base and build

• Top-down technology - CC› Government edict is necessary

• By-product technology - E-mail, SMS, IM› Existing technologies, if useful, will be

adopted

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