scholarly journals Interaction With ATM for Blind

Author(s):  
Sarfaraz Ahmed ◽  
T. Senthil Kumaran

<p>A talking ATM may be a kind of Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) that gives perceptible directions so that persons United Nations agency will not scan associate degree ATM screen can severally use the machine. All perceptible data is delivered in private through an earpiece jack on the face of the device or an on an individual basis hooked up a telephone. Information provided to the client either through pre-recorded sound files or via text-to-speech synthesis A user plugs a conventional telephone receiver into the jack, hear directions and also the user can respond to voice. In spite of everything, the small print is given press OK button for confirmation. There's associate degree perceptible orientation for initial time users, and perceptible data describing the placement of options like the OK button, deposit slot, and card slot. During this application is principally developed for the blind individuals. The blind people cannot see the keyboard and also the screen for the system. They enter the input details through voice. The voice to text converter can convert into text and method additional way. The system offers the instruction regarding the system usage through voice.</p>

Author(s):  
Andrew Marriott ◽  
Roberto Pockaj ◽  
Craig Parker

This chapter describes the use of a graphical humane interface—a Virtual Salesperson. The face of the Virtual Salesperson is a generic Facial Animation Engine developed at the University of Genova in Italy and uses a 3-D computer graphics model based on the MPEG-4 standard supplemented by Cyberware scans for facial detail. The appearance of the head may be modified by Facial Definition Parameters to more accurately model the required visage allowing one model to represent many different Talking Heads. The “brain” of the Virtual Salesperson, developed at Curtin University, integrates natural language parsing, text to speech synthesis, and artificial intelligence systems to produce a “bot” capable of helping a user through a question/answer sales enquiry. The Virtual Salesperson is a specific example of a generic Human Computer Interface—a Talking Head.


IEE Review ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 37 (10) ◽  
pp. 357
Author(s):  
C.J. Hughes ◽  
A. (Gill) Waters

Author(s):  
Beiming Cao ◽  
Myungjong Kim ◽  
Jan van Santen ◽  
Ted Mau ◽  
Jun Wang

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elshadai Tesfaye Biru ◽  
Yishak Tofik Mohammed ◽  
David Tofu ◽  
Erica Cooper ◽  
Julia Hirschberg

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