Ajit Narayanan

Ajit Narayanan
Born (1981-08-21) August 21, 1981
India
Nationality Indian
Occupation Inventor
Known for Avaz app, MIT TR35 awardee

Ajit Narayanan (born August 21, 1981) is the inventor of FreeSpeech, a picture language with a deep grammatical structure.[1] He's also the inventor of Avaz, India's first Augmentative and Alternative Communication device for children with disabilities.[2] He is a TR35 awardee (2011)[3] and an awardee of the National Award for Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities[4] by the President of India (2010).

Early life and education

Ajit grew up in Chennai, India and showed an early aptitude for language and mathematics. He went on to study electrical engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IIT Madras). During his graduation, he received the Motorola Prize for his academic and extra-curricular activities.[5] During his time at IIT Madras, he was a part of the Institute quiz team, notably captaining the team that won the University Challenge in 2003,[6] and editing the IIT Madras campus magazine, The Fourth Estate.[7] Ajit subsequently moved to the United States, working for several years at American Megatrends.

FreeSpeech

In February 2013, Ajit gave a TED talk[8] on a new linguistic structure called FreeSpeech, and an algorithm called the FreeSpeech engine. FreeSpeech was created in response to a need felt among children with complex communication needs to communicate in multiple languages. FreeSpeech is a semantic map of pictures that represent words. These words are linked together in pairs of question/answer relationships, and have pictorial markers for tense, number etc. applied on top of them. The structure's stated aim was to capture 'meaning' rather than 'surface form' of language, and then use a set of algorithms (the FreeSpeech engine) to generate grammatical English out of it.

FreeSpeech is language-independent, meaning it uses pictures of objects, actions, and even abstract ideas like the past tense, instead of English words like "I" or "eat". Some shown on the TED talk include a bowl of soup, a person talking, and a small clock with an arrow pointing backward to signify the past tense of a verb.

FreeSpeech was tested widely among children with special needs such as autism and language impairments, to teach them grammar. It also saw use by children in the Deaf community to learn literacy—a task complicated by the unique grammatical structure of American Sign Language, which is very different from English.

Beyond applications in disability, the Indian government was in talks to license this program to use in some of its schools to teach English, through the Aakash tablet project.

Avaz

In 2010, Ajit invented Avaz. Avaz is an Alternative and augmentative communication device. It works by generating speech from limited muscle movements like that from the head or hand, and is used people with speech disorders such as cerebral palsy, autism, intellectual disability, and aphasia.[9]

References

  1. "FreeSpeech". Retrieved 11 Feb 2016.
  2. Shah, Natascha (April 16, 2010). "Speech weaver : Cover Story". India Today. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  3. "TR35: Ajit Narayanan, 29". Technology Review (Massachusetts Institute of Technology). 2011. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  4. Sehgal, Sunaina (February 2011). "Avaz, Invention Labs". Inc. India. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  5. http://www.iitm.ac.in/studentawards
  6. Kamath, Sudish (2003-08-10). "Quiz kings". The Hindu.
  7. "The Fourth Estate, Nov 2002" (PDF).
  8. http://www.ted.com/talks/ajit_narayanan_a_word_game_to_communicate_in_any_language
  9. "Chennai: IIT engineer gives cerebral palsy patients a voice". Ibnlive. Retrieved 20 May 2013.

External links


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