2007-12-20

Voice Recognition Goes Main Stream in the Nintendo DS

I would describe the youth of today as technically savvy using most of the technology we have today with ease and adding new tools quickly to their everyday life.

So when watching a 9 year old pick up a Nintendo DS and load the Brain Age

I was as surprised as they were to discover it had speech recognition built in and the game was dependent on this technology. But what was interesting was the 9 year old was not familiar with this technology and did not just intuitively know what to do……

This was one of those moments where I realized that speech recognition is still not in the main stream quite yet. Hand a child a remote control and they just know how to use it.

In the case of the Nintendo DS and the Brain Age there was some simple instructions displayed on the screen and some verbal cues. Just before the game started the user is asked a question – “Are you in a place where you can talk”. It did not occur to me or the child that this was of significance. The game/exercise begins – it is a simple Left/Right brain exercise that challenges the mind to look at color and text and separate them

The Four used Blue, Red, Yellow and Black appear on either one or other of the screens (the game is designed to be played so these screens are on the left and right (not in the more typical up down configuration). Each color is displayed and could be simply

BLUE - that’s easy – all you have to do is say Blue. The game recognizes you verbalizing Blue and marks you correct.

But the game also displays that color:

BLACK

In which case the answer is still “Blue” but your brain will need to process this and not say “Black” There are multiple variants

YELLOW, RED, BLACK BLUE

Fort eh color RED and so on (that adds up to a total of 16 possible display choices with only 4 possible answers)

Back to the 9 year old – the first time a color was displayed they just looked at it with no idea what to do. Staring at the screen nothing happens but then as questions are verbalized the screen starts to react to what it is hearing.


See Nicole Kidman in Video using Brain Age


Once it is clear that the solution is to speak the color of the letters the game commences and the novelty of speech recognition that actually works proves to be quite the hit. I can imagine now some variation of the now old movie line from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home where Scotty asks to use a computer and is shown to a computer. Having been immersed in the 21st century where computers all talk and understand speech he verbalizes his commands with the immortal words of “Hello Computer”. Nothing happens and he looks perplexed and when handed the mouse by a helpful observer he picks it up and says again “Hello Computer”. I can picture this same sequence playing out at least in the short term as the 9 year old and other kids now exposed to the natural interface of speech and the machine have a higher expectation of this technology being present in their everyday interactions with technology.


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