The Speech Accessibility Project is almost halfway through its first phase of gathering voice recordings from people with Parkinson’s Urbana, Illinois — The Speech Accessibility Project is almost ...
The Speech Accessibility Project is almost halfway through its first phase of gathering voice recordings from people with Parkinson's. The project still needs more participants, especially those with ...
Many people with Parkinson’s disease experience speech and swallowing difficulties that can weaken their voice or make them difficult to understand. Thanks to a grant from the Parkinson Voice Project, ...
Each year, nearly 90,000 people in the U.S. are diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, a condition that can present a variety of symptoms and life-altering setbacks — including losing the ability to ...
For individuals with Parkinson’s, one of the most devastating effects of the incurable neurological condition is having their voices slowly fall silent. “Initially a patient might talk very softly,” ...
The Speech Accessibility Project is a research initiative to make voice recognition technology more useful for people with a range of diverse speech patterns and disabilities. The project is housed ...
CHENEY, Wash. — A clinic at Eastern Washington University (EWU) is working with a Texas non-profit clinic to make speech treatment for individuals with Parkinson's Disease more accessible. Parkinson ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. — The founder of a national non-profit that helps people with Parkinson's Disease visited Buffalo on Wednesday to share a message of hope. Samantha Elandary resigned from her job as as a ...
The Department of Communication Disorders (DCD) at Arkansas State University is the “Speak Out!” Therapy and Research Center in the state. Developed by the Parkinson Voice Project, the program ...
ALTON — The OSF Saint Anthony’s therapy office at Alton Square now offers speech language therapy for Parkinson’s patients helping them regain normal speech. People diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease ...
Listening to people with Parkinson's disease made an automatic speech recognizer 30-percent more accurate, according to a new study. As Mark Hasegawa-Johnson combed through data from his latest ...