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Panipat teen makes device to convert breath into words

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New Delhi: Arsh Shah Dilbagi, a 16-year-old from Panipat, has entered the Google’s Global Science Fair as the only finalist from Asia this year for developing a device that helps people with developmental disabilities – Locked-In Syndrome and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis or speech impairments like Dysarthria – communicate using only their breath.

The device, called ‘Talk’, uses signals from a person’s breath and converts them into speech. Dilbagi, a student of DAV International School, Panipat, says the device even allows almost entirely speech impaired and paralyzed people to communicate like never before.

Arsh’s Talk is a pocket-friendly innovative device that breathes new hope in the lives of those who find it difficult to communicate with others due to developmental disabilities. “Approx. 1.4% of the world population suffers from such disorders, which is more than the population of Germany,” Arsh said.

Claiming to have built the world’s fastest and cheapest Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) device, a kind used by physicist Stephen Hawking, Dilbagi says it is not possible for all those who have motor-neuro disabilities to afford an AAC device that costs $7,000 (Rs 4.26 lakh).

“AAC devices available in the market are very expensive, slow, bulky and not generic. I decided to find a better solution — an AAC device which is faster, portable and generic and costs only $80 (Rs 5000), making it affordable to the large population,” he explains.

The young innovator says ‘Talk’ expects a person to be able to give two distinguishable exhales with varying intensities, for converting them into electrical signals using a microphone. The signals are processed by a microprocessor, called the ‘Morse engine’, which labels the short exhales as ‘dots’ and longer exhales as ‘dashes’. These are further interpreted through the Morse code which converts the signals into words and then sends them to another microprocessor for synthesizing them into voice.

According to Dilbagi, ‘Talk’ features two modes – one to communicate in English and the other to give specific commands and phrases. These are communicated in nine different voices enabled according to gender and age.

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