Computer learns to speak like a baby
Posted on 25 Jul 2007 at 10:38
A computer program that learns to decode sounds from different languages in the same way that a baby does helps to shed new light on how people learn to talk, according to researchers.
They said the finding casts doubt on theories that babies are born knowing all the possible sounds in all of the world's languages.
"The debate in language acquisition is around the question of how much specific information about language is hard-wired into the brain of the infant and how much of the knowledge that infants acquire about language is something that can be explained by relatively general purpose learning systems," says James McClelland, a psychology professor at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.
McClelland says his computer program supports the theory that babies systematically sort through sounds until they understand the structure of a language.
"The problem the child confronts is how many categories are there and how should I think about it. We're trying to propose a method that solves that problem," says McClelland, whose work appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Expanding on some existing ideas, he and a team of international researchers developed a computer model that resembles the brain processes a baby uses when learning about speech.
He and colleagues tested their model by exposing it to "training sessions" that consisted of analysing recorded speech in both English and Japanese between mothers and babies in a lab.
What they found is the computer was able to learn basic vowel sounds right along with baby. "It learns how many sounds there are. It figures that out," he says.
And if the computer can do it, he claims, a baby can, too. "In the past, people have tried to argue it wasn't possible for any machine to learn these things, and so it had to be hard-wired (in humans)," McClelland says. "Those arguments, in my view, were not particularly well grounded."
Author: Reuters
advertisement
- Google and BT offer free website service to British businesses
- Lords' last chance to protect broadband customers
- Extreme handwriting recognition on the Dell Latitude XT2
- 12 surprising things that Wolfram Alpha knows
- Nokia N900: phone or pocket computer?
- The sinister side of Spotify
- My brain can type!
- Book Review: Crush It! By Gary Vaynerchuk
- Asus E-Reader DR-950 review: first look at CeBIT
- Asus Eee Keyboard review: first look at CeBIT
- Banish your Wi-Fi woes
- How to commit Facebook suicide
- Which smartphone keyboard is the best?
- We can beat the botnets
- Paying for code doesn’t mean owning it
- Cracking the iSCSI conundrum
- The perfect open-source task scheduler
- Exploring Microsoft Office 2010 beta
- How to stop tech ruining your home life
- Bulk installing software with Ninite
advertisement



Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk