Video game technology helped a woman regain her speech

The scientific success story has raised hopes that the tech could soon help more people.
By Teodosia Dobriyanova  on 
The woman who participated in the study looks at her Avatar on screen.
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A woman who lost her speech after a stroke is regaining it thanks to video game technology.

Facial animation software company Speech Graphics and researchers at UC San Francisco and UC Berkeley have collaborated on a brain-computer interface that can restore communication for paralyzed people.

The team tracked the parts of the woman’s brain responsible for speech and implanted a paper-thin rectangle of 253 electrodes near the surface of that area. The electrodes decoded her brain signals and, through a cable fixed to the implant, transmitted them to computers where AI algorithms were trained to read her brain activity.

The AI learned a vocabulary of over 1,000 words over several weeks, which it then reproduced in audio based on recordings of her own voice pre-stroke.

Speech Graphics created the avatar with its AI-based facial animation tech, usually used for video games like Fortnite. The AI was harnessed to simulate the woman's individual facial muscles to express certain emotions.

Though this is still a proof of concept, the success of the all-rounded avatar has raised hopes that the technology could soon be able to help many others.

Picture of Teodosia
Teodosia Dobriyanova
Video Producer

Teodosia is a video producer at Mashable UK, focussing on stories about climate resilience, urban development, and social good.


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