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In the movie, Edison Carter (portrayed by Frewer) is a journalist fleeing enemies into a parking garage, crashing his motorcycle through the entrance barrier reading "Max. headroom 2.3 metres" - UK vehicle clearance signs use the phrase "Max headroom". While Carter is unconscious, an AI program based on his mind is created.
The findings showed that people do not read the text on webpages word-by-word, but instead generally read horizontally across the top of the webpage, then in a second horizontal movement slightly lower on the page, and lastly scan vertically down the left side of the screen. [3]
One thing I want people to know about bad texters is that we don't hate you — we aren't bad at texting because we don't want to talk to you, we just don't want to text!"
This involves a paper-and-pencil procedure, where readers are asked to circle a target letter, such as "t" every time they come across it while reading a prose passage or text. [3] [4] Researchers measure the number of letter detection errors, or missed circled target letters, in the texts. The missing letter effect is more likely to appear ...
Real-time text programs date at least to the 1970s, with the talk program on the DEC PDP-11, which remains in use on Unix systems. Beam Messenger, a mobile app offering real-time text messaging, was released in 2014. [3] Certain real-time text applications have a feature that allows the real-time text to be "turned off", for temporary purposes.
The reaction time between perceiving speech and then producing speech has been recorded at 250 ms for a standardised test. [2] However, for people with left dominant brains, the reaction time has been recorded at 150 ms. [4] Functional imaging finds that the shadowing of speech occurs through the dorsal stream. [5]
A DAISY player and audio book from Plextor. Digital accessible information system (DAISY) is a technical standard for digital audiobooks, periodicals, and computerized text.. DAISY is designed to be a complete audio substitute for print material and is specifically designed for use by people with print disabilities, including blindness, impaired vision, and dyslex
Time period Key developments 1877–1971: Speech recognition is at an early stage of development. Specialized devices can recognize few words and accuracy is not very high. [1] 1971–1987: Speech recognition rapidly improves, although the technology is still not commercially available. [1] 1987–2014