University of London Student Creates Glove That Translates Sign Language Into Text And Speech
Sign language has been around for as long as people have been deaf. You’ve seen it during the Super Bowl, the State of the Union Address, and you’ll one day use it to change TV channels. But how do you improve communication between the hearing, speech, and visually impaired community? That was the question asked by Hadeel Ayoub?, a Goldsmiths, University of London student, when she set out to make a glove that translates sign language into speech and text.
Ayoub created three different prototypes. The first looks the clunkiest: It kind of resembles an oven mitt, has wires jutting out every which way, and only outputs a single letter to a display.
Hey, check out all the research scientist jobs. Post your resume today!
Ayoub created three different prototypes. The first looks the clunkiest: It kind of resembles an oven mitt, has wires jutting out every which way, and only outputs a single letter to a display.
Hey, check out all the research scientist jobs. Post your resume today!