Researchers Are Translating Brain Activity Into Speech

It could lead to a computer-generated speaking tool for the speech impaired

Chia-Yi Hou
OneZero
Published in
4 min readApr 24, 2019

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Illustration of electrode placements on the research participants’ neural speech centers, from which activity patterns recorded during speech (colored dots) were translated into a computer simulation of the participant’s vocal tract which then could be synthesized to reconstruct the sentence that had been spoken (sound wave & sentence, below). Credit: Chang lab / UCSF Dept. of Neurosurgery

SScientists are getting closer to developing a computer-generated tool to allow people with severe speech impairments — like the late cosmologist Stephen Hawking — to communicate verbally.

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Chia-Yi Hou
OneZero

Science journalist based in New York with a PhD in infectious disease ecology. @chiayi_hou on Twitter.