Tactile Speech Communication: Reception of Words and Two-Way Messages through a Phoneme-Based Display
Author(s)
Jung, Jaehong; Reed, Charlotte M.; Martinez, Juan S.; Tan, Hong Z.
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The long-term goal of this research is the development of a stand-alone tactile device for the communication of speech for persons with profound sensory deficits as well as for applications for persons with intact hearing and vision. Studies were conducted with a phoneme-based tactile display of speech consisting of a 4-by-6 array of tactors worn on the dorsal and ventral surfaces of the forearm. Unique tactile signals were assigned to the 39 English phonemes. Study I consisted of training and testing on the identification of 4-phoneme words. Performance on a trained set of 100 words averaged 87% across the three participants and generalized well to a novel set of words (77%). Study II consisted of two-way messaging between two users of TAPS (TActile Phonemic Sleeve) for 13 h over 45 days. The participants conversed with each other by inputting text that was translated into tactile phonemes sent over the device. Messages were identified with an accuracy of 73% correct in conjunction with 82% of the words. Although rates of communication were slow (roughly 1 message per minute), the results obtained with this ecologically valid procedure represent progress toward the goal of a stand-alone tactile device for speech communication.
Date issued
2024-05-07Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Research Laboratory of ElectronicsJournal
Virtual Worlds
Publisher
MDPI AG
Citation
Jung, J.; Reed, C.M.; Martinez, J.S.; Tan, H.Z. Tactile Speech Communication: Reception of Words and Two-Way Messages through a Phoneme-Based Display. Virtual Worlds 2024, 3, 184-207.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2813-2084