kzt wrote:Bill Woods wrote:So something Stephen Hawking can master is beyond the capability of a treecat?

Apparently. There is a XBOX based ASL translator out there, so it is certainly well within the capabilities of honorverse tech.
But the versions we have now have their problems. Very much so in "communication mode." The mode in recognizing and translating the sign. I personally thought the hurdle would be insurmountable, because how can one teach a computer to recognize facial gestures and body language. Don't get me wrong, I hope there is a real breakthrough here, because there is a serious need for the tech. Deaf people are cut off from loved ones and a technology as such would be a miracle to many hearing impaired people's quality of life.
But I just don't know how practical it would be. If it would further water down the sign language. Sign language has a real quality to it for those who speak it fluently. But it's ripe with the body language and facial gestures. If a computer can only recognize certain aspects of the spoken sign, then what impact would it ultimately have on the language? Would it inevitably pidgeon-hole the language?
Would it have limited utility as early voice recognition software, unable to ascend the next level?
And what of the differences of each language's signing counterpart?
The XBox's abilities...
While the technology in its current state "can successfully produce good results for translator mode," which picks up isolated words signed by a specific person, "we are diligently working to overcome the technology hurdles so that the system can reliably understand and interpret in communication mode," Wu said. The goal of communication mode is to understand "continuous communication from any competent signer."
Wu added that "while we’re solving those challenges, we are also starting to build up the system's vocabulary of American Sign Language gestures, which are different from those of Chinese Sign Language." Nonetheless, Wu said the project is off to a good start and that his group expects "that more and more researchers from different disciplines and different countries will collaboratively build on the prototype, so that the Kinect Sign Language Translator system will ultimately benefit the global community of those who are deaf or hard of hearing."
http://www.eweek.com/pc-hardware/xboxs- ... guage.htmlI suppose, with advanced Honorverse computers and AI, advanced pattern recognition algorithms would be a piece of cake. Though I still see problems and a dialect all its own emerging.
But you don't want it to lose its qualities so much that the ability of the deaf to accurately convey their meaning is further "handicapped." Project that same sentiment on to the cats, whose form of communication is already watered down, then watered down again by a different form of communication. Then watered down again in adapting that form of communication to them. Then watered down again because of the inaccuracies of the system, then watered down again because of the German. Then watered down again because of the cats and the human's lack of mastery - lends a new meaning to
Lost in Translation.