AlterEgo


AlterEgo is a wearable silent speech output-input device developed by MIT Media Lab.[1] The device is attached around the head, neck, and jawline and translates your brain speech center impulse input into words on a computer, without vocalization.

Description

The device consists of 7 small electrodes that attach at various points around the jaw-line and mouth to receive the electrical inputs to the muscles used for speech. It looks similar to a sling for the head, neck and jaw.

Background

Scientists Arnav Kapur of Fluid Interfaces group at MIT Media Lab with Shreyas Kapur and Pattie Maes designed the prototype and presented the work at the Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces in March 2018, in Tokyo. They reported that, when testing the accuracy of a classifier trained on data where users were instructed to "read the number to themselves, without producing a sound and moving their lips," they were able to classify the digit (between 0 to 9, i.e., ten classes), with 92 percent accuracy rate.[2]

gollark: Hey, it works!
gollark: ؜this message؜ I alsot æ
gollark: Looks normal.
gollark: I try and design all my stuff to be fully Unicode-capable in case someone needs that. But I also don't bother to add internationalization for controls or anything because something.
gollark: As much as I like the existence of other cultures and all, wow are their writing systems annoying to handle on computers.

References

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