Use Sign Language To Change TV Channels

Published September 12, 2015 by TNJ Staff
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SIGNResearchers have built a system that can detect letters and numbers in American Sign Language with high accuracy.

Apple ?AAPL 1.31% ?got a lot of attention earlier this week for the new voice recognition features in the upcoming version of Apple TV, the company?s set-top box for streaming movies, television and more. But there?s one group of consumers who probably didn?t pay much attention: those who can?t hear.

Although being able to control devices and the movies you watch by saying ?Show me Brad Pitt movies? or ?Turn up the volume? might seem great to most TV viewers, it?s not very useful if you can?t speak, or can?t speak well enough for a voice recognition system to understand. However, new research published this week in arXiv, an online archive of research papers managed by Cornell University, claims a significant improvement in computers that can understand American Sign Language.

A trio of researchers from the University of California, San Diego, claim their new deep-learning-based system can accurately recognize signed letters and numbers more than 85% of the time when exposed to new test subjects. The ability of technology to recognize signs from new people?rather than those whose signs were used to train the system?is important for sign-language recognition to become commercially viable technology like voice recognition.

While consumers often love the idea of interacting with their phones, TVs, and other connected devices, it?s not clear they also love the idea of having to train the software inside to recognize what they?re saying. We want our devices to be smart, but we also want them to be easy.

Personally speaking, while I love asking my Amazon Echo connected speaker to play music or add something to my shopping list, I long ago gave up opening the app and verifying that it heard me correctly. The same goes for providing information about Amazon ?AMZN 1.37% purchases, reviewing Netflix ?NFLX -1.98% ?movies, answering?Was this useful? questions on the Google Now ?GOOG 0.71% ?personal assistant app, and other opportunities to provide feedback.

And while the UCSD researchers acknowledge field of sign language recognition is still in its early days?we?re talking about letters and numbers here, for example, not words or sentences?it?s not hard to envision seeing consumer devices that recognize signs. Computers, smart TVs and robots already have cameras, processors and web connections built in, so much of the infrastructure is already in place. In fact, other researchers, including some at Microsoft ?MSFT 0.37% , are also working to make the company?s Kinect motion sensors recognize sign language.

Read more at?FORTUNE

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