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To demonstrate the importance of the auditory sense, try watching the
television news with the sound turned off. Then try it again with the
sound on, but without looking at the picture. Next, try a similar
experiment with a videotape of the movie 2001. You will
probably find it easier to follow the stories with your ears alone
than with your eyes alone, even though our eyes transmit much more
information to our brains than our ears do -- about fifty billion
bits per second from both eyes versus approximately a million bits per
second from two ears. The result is surprising. There is a saying that
a picture is worth a thousand words; yet the above exercise
illustrates the superior power of spoken language to convey our
thoughts. Part of that power lies in the close link between verbal
language and conscious thinking. Until recently, a popular theory held
that thinking was subvocalized speech. (J. B. Watson, the founder of
behaviorism, attached great attention to the small movements of the
tongue and larynx made while we think.) Although we now recognize that
thoughts incorporate both language and visual images, the crucial
importance of the auditory sense in the acquisition of knowledge
-- which we need in order to recognize speech in the first place
-- is widely accepted.
Yet many people consider blindness a more serious handicap than deafness. A careful consideration of the issues shows this to be a misconception. With modern mobility techniques, blind persons with appropriate training have little difficulty going from place to place. The blind employees of my first company (Kurzweil Computer Products, Inc., which developed the Kurzweil Reading Machine for the Blind) traveled around the world routinely. Reading machines can vprovide access to the world of print, and visually impaired people experience few barriers to communicating with others in groups or individual encounters. For the deaf, however, the barrier to understanding what other people are saying is fundamental.
We learn to understand and produce spoken language during our first
year of life, years before we can understand or create written
language. HAL apparently spent years learning human speech by
listening to his teacher, whom he identifies as Mr. Langley, at the
HAL lab in Urbana, Illinois. Studies with humans have shown that
groups of people can solve problems with dramatically greater speed if
they can communicate verbally rather than being restricted to other
methods. HAL and his human colleagues amply demonstrate this
finding. Thus, intelligent machines that understand verbal language
make possible an optimal modality of communication. In recent years, a
major goal of artificial intelligence research has been making our
interactions with computers more natural and intuitive. HAL's
primarily verbal communication with crew members is a clear example of
an intuitive user interface.
He built a device he called a phonautograph to make visual
patterns from sound. Attaching a thin stylus to an eardrum he obtained
from a medical school, he traced the patterns produced by speaking
through the eardrum on a smoked glass screen. His wife, however, was
unable to understand speech by looking at these patterns. The device
could convert speech sounds into pictures, but the pictures were
highly variable and showed no similarity in patterns, even when the
same person spoke the same word.
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