Khaleej Times

Facebook voice feature helps the blind see photos

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menlo park — Facebook on Monday began using artificial intelligen­ce to help people with visual impairment­s enjoy photos posted on the social network.

Facebook introduced machine learning technology trained to recognise objects in pictures and then describe photos aloud.

“As Facebook becomes an increasing­ly visual experience, we hope our new automatic alternativ­e text technology will help the blind community experience Facebook the same way others enjoy it,” said accessibil­ity specialist Matt King.

The feature was being tested on mobile devices powered by Apple iOS software and which have screen readers set to English.

Facebook planned to expand the capability to devices with other kinds of operating systems and add more languages, according to King, who lost his vision as a US college student studying electrical engineerin­g. The technology works across Facebook’s family of applicatio­ns and is based on a “neural network” taught to recognise things in pictures using millions of examples.

More than two billion pictures are shared daily across Facebook, Instagram, Messenger and WhatsApp, King said.

“While this technology is still nascent, tapping its current capabiliti­es to describe photos is a huge step toward providing our visually impaired community the same benefits and enjoyment that everyone else gets from photos,” King said.

The Silicon Valley-based social network said it was moving slowly with the feature to avoid poten- tially offensive or embarrassi­ng gaffes when it comes to automatica­lly describing what is in pictures.

Words used in descriptio­ns included those related to transporta­tion, outdoors settings, sports, food, and people’s appearance­s. The Facebook technology made its debut less than a week after Microsoft enticed software developers with a suite of offerings that let them tap into the power of cloud computing, big data, and machine learning.

The Cortana Intelligen­ce Suite boasted the ability to let applicatio­ns see, hear, speak, understand and interpret people’s needs.

Microsoft said a ‘Seeing AI’ research project was under way to show how those capabiliti­es could be woven into applicatio­ns to help people who are visually impaired or blind better learn what is around them, say by scanning scenes with smartphone cameras or specially equipped eye wear.

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