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July 25, 2007 10:48 AM PDT

Computer learns vowels like a baby

by Stefanie Olsen
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A team of researchers has developed a computer program that can learn to decipher sounds the way a baby does.

The impetus behind the program was to better understand how people learn to talk, or more specifically, to see whether language is hard-wired in the brain.

Tests of the computer model back up a theory that babies learn to speak by sorting through different sounds until they understand the structure of a language, according to James McClelland, a psychology professor at Stanford University who wrote a paper on the subject that appeared in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. McClelland was quoted in a an article from Reuters.

McClelland's team found that the computer could track vowel sounds just like a baby. "In the past, people have tried to argue it wasn't possible for any machine to learn these things," he said in the Reuters article.

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Stop
by Skohr July 26, 2007 7:39 AM PDT
Seriously, hasn't anyone seen the movies Terminator? If there is just one single lesson that Arnold taught us through that epic film it's that machines that can learn will eventually be our downfall. So... stop.
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