DocumentCode
762385
Title
Video Transmission of American Sign Language and Finger Spelling: Present and Projected Bandwidth Requirements
Author
Sperling, George
Author_Institution
Dept. of Psychology, New York Univ., New York, NY, USA and Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ, USA
Volume
29
Issue
12
fYear
1981
fDate
12/1/1981 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1993
Lastpage
2002
Abstract
The bandwidth for communicating ASL sentences, isolated lists of ASL nouns, and finger-spelled names by a television type of raster scan was measured for a heterogeneous deaf population. Video sequences of a signer were shown to subjects at 60 frames/s (without interlace) with a raster composed of from 9 to 79 lines/frame corresponding to a bandwidth of from 1.1 to 86 kHz. Most subjects could interpret ASL sentences with little loss at a bandwidth of 21 kHz; the most expert ASL users received sentences at 40-50 percent correct at a bandwidth of 4.4 kHz. Even with the present nonoptimal raster, expert signers require a bandwidth for ASL communication that is just four times greater than the bandwidth required by experienced speakers for equivalent performance with auditory speech. With a more judicious choice of raster parameters, with better display conditions, and with better camera position, it seems quite probable that the present raster-bandwidth requirement could be lowered. Transmission at ordinary (3 kHz) telephone bandwidths will require more sophisticated picture coding, perhaps with different codes for ASL, finger spelling, and speechreading.
Keywords
Auditory system prostheses/orthoses; Image transmission; Auditory displays; Bandwidth; Cameras; Deafness; Fingers; Handicapped aids; Speech; TV; Telephony; Video sequences;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Communications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0090-6778
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TCOM.1981.1094953
Filename
1094953
Link To Document