Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!dali.cs.montana.edu!milton!hlab From: iaf@uk.ac.cam.cl.ely (Innes Ferguson) Newsgroups: sci.virtual-worlds Subject: Re: Chris' Ethics Paper: Report from Cybercon 2 Message-ID: <1991May2.154051.117@milton.u.washington.edu> Date: 2 May 91 12:05:20 GMT References: <1991Apr29.200959.17885@milton.u.washington.edu> Sender: hlab@milton.u.washington.edu (Human Int. Technology Lab) Organization: University of Washington Lines: 33 Approved: cyberoid@milton.u.washington.edu In <1991Apr29.200959.17885@milton.u.washington.edu> Alan Kilian says: >>From: seguine@girtab.usc.edu (Christopher Seguine) > >>SCENARIO I (Adam uses a glove to sign which gets translated into speech) > >This is the coolest application I have ever heard for VR technology. >Very very very cool. Congratulations. Now Do you think that this will EVER >get done? I sort of doubt it really. Something similar has been done already (or is being done). The system I saw didn't use a glove per se; rather it used a full sensor-clad robotic hand that the hearing-impaired user could "mould" into the desired sign. When satisfied the user could "push a button" and generate a synthetic spoken version of the sign. I can't remember who's doing it, what TV program I saw it on, or how advanced it is. Sorry. BTW, this surely isn't a VR application. It's a "plain old" HCI/speech synthesis one. I'm not saying it's easy, but it must be easier than speech recog./understanding given the more constrained form of input (hand signs vs. speech signals). Regards... Innes ============================================================================= Innes A. Ferguson Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Pembroke St., Cambridge CB2 3QG, England, UK. BITNET: iaf@cl.cam.ac.uk JANET: iaf@uk.ac.cam.cl Tel.: +44 223 334421 FAX: +44 223 334678 =============================================================================