ChatterBaby App Deciphers Baby's Cries

ChatterBaby App Deciphers Baby's Cries
May-24-18
The ChatterBaby app helps parents decipher the meanings of their baby’s cries.

Developed by a team at UCLA, the ChatterBaby app was originally developed with hearing-impaired parents in mind to offer nuanced information beyond the basic remote noise monitor. The app relies on an algorithm created based on more than 2,000 baby cry samples, and can accurately identify a cry that indicates pain with a 90 percent accuracy (pain and hunger are more difficult to determine).

The ChatterBaby also includes a personalization app that parents can use to ‘train’ the system to better recognize their baby’s cries, as well as help improve the general accuracy of the algorithm.



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[UCLA.EDU]
[CHATTERBABY.ORG]
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Are there already applications which moderate time delay in communication? While waiting for a real AI those might be developed by crowdsourcing. At the beginning it might be simplest for kindred people, who have common interests and think similarly. When getting progress they could adjust the delay to be all the more lengthy. Finally communication would be a balanced mix of reality and simulation. This is not enough for exact commenting, but spacemen could chat fluently with their intimates on Earth, especially children.
Posted by Uolevi Kattun on May 26, 2018

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