City
Epaper

Facebook Live enables AI automated captions for the disabled

By IANS | Published: September 16, 2020 11:17 AM

New Delhi, Sep 16 To help people with disabilities, researchers at Facebook AI have made live video content more ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 16 To help people with disabilities, researchers at Facebook AI have made live video content more accessible by enabling automatic closed captions for Facebook Live and Workplace Live.

 

 

At the moment, Facebook Live automatic captions support six languages English, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, German and French.

While Facebook provides automatic closed captioning for on-demand videos in 16 languages, and just announced similar capabilities for Instagram IGTV, access to live, real-time news and information was still a dream for those who are deaf or hard of hearing.

According to the World Health Organization, over 5% of the world's population – or 466 million people – have disabling hearing loss, and that is projected to increase to over 900 million by 2050.

"Facebook Live automatic captions are helping governments disseminate crucial public health information, and ensuring that millions of viewers across the world – whether they have hearing loss, or are just watching where audio is not available – get the message," Facebook said in a blog post on Tuesday.

The voice and video calling have surged in recent months during the Covid-19 pandemic as people around the world check in with family, friends and colleagues.

"Video captioning is critical for people like me in the deaf community during a public health emergency," said Brenden Gilbert, a production operations engineer at Facebook.

The rapid spread of the Covid-19 pandemic caused a spike in both the supply and demand of public health information.

Several governments discovered that video captioning was not just a nice-to-have, but imperative, especially in the absence of available sign language interpreters.

"Many of them needed captions to comply with their own disability access rules for public broadcasts," explained Daniel McKinnon, a Product Manager at Facebook.

Julian Chan, a Facebook AI software engineer said that the AI system is also capable of adapting to new words such as "Covid," which is essential for captioning public health information-based broadcasts during the pandemic.

Facebook said that the broadcasters can count on automatic closed captions to support their efforts to get the message out, whether a state official is sharing authoritative health guidance, or someone is simply taking their viewers behind the scenes of a day in their life — during Covid-19 and beyond.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Outlook.comBrenden gilbertDaniel mckinnonFacebookFacebook connectivityAfter facebookNl salvi
Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyFacebook, Instagram Down: Meta-Owned Apps Not Loading for Users

InternationalHungary President Katalin Novak Resigns for Pardoning Accomplice in Child Abuse Case (Watch Video)

MumbaiAbhishek Ghosalkar Shot Dead: 'God Bless You' Were Shiv Sena UBT Leader's Last Words; What Exactly Happened?

TechnologyFacebook Turns 20, Instagram Sends Heartfelt Message to Zuckerberg: 'Love You Dad'

BusinessMeta Soars with Record $196 Billion Gain, Declares First Dividend

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyCyber extortion top concern for 37 pc Indian firms: Report

TechnologyWhatsApp Banned?: A Step-by-Step Guide To Unblock Your Number And Account

TechnologyLong Covid symptoms can differ among children of various age groups: Study

TechnologyApple making significant investments in GenAI, to share ‘very exciting things’ soon

TechnologyWhatsApp Cracks Down in India: Over 7 Crore Accounts Banned in 2023