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Deaf lady hears her voice for first time [Video]

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by ToyCen428, Sep 30, 2011.

  1. greenhippos

    greenhippos Member

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    She could have stayed deaf and I would have taken a run at her, a serious one at that.
     
    1 person likes this.
  2. Maximus

    Maximus Member

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    I'm such a sissy. My heart breaks every time i see a girl cry. I just can't help it.
     
  3. what

    what Member

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    I'm pretty sure she didn't have any problem in that area, deaf or not.
     
  4. Maximus

    Maximus Member

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    Watching it again, that lady got on my nerves. She's still talking to her like she's a r****d or something. Kind of like how Americans talk to people from other countries who don't speak english. "Hiiii Hooooow. Arrrreee. Youuu?"
     
  5. napalm06

    napalm06 Huge Flopping Fan

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    Those are probably tears of joy.
     
  6. tmoney1101

    tmoney1101 Member

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    Meh. If you've seen it once...
     
  7. Jontro

    Jontro Member

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    Technology is pure awesomeness.

    This reminds me of the dude with the sonar vision. Equally, if not more, awesome.
     
  8. Nook

    Nook Member

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    Check yourself.... we gave you props once, don't ruin it.
     
  9. aghast

    aghast Member

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    1:16:
    "Do you want to hear your husband say something?"
    No response.
    Presumably her husband, filming: [nervous laughter]

    Yep. She's totally trading up now.
     
  10. joesr

    joesr Member

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    See I was wondering the same. How did she know what the words sounded like to know what she was saying???
     
  11. Maximus

    Maximus Member

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    Even those. I think the sound and the look on their face. Don't get me started on a little girl. I hope i never have a daughter b/c that will be the end of me to see her cry.
     
  12. BetterThanI

    BetterThanI Member

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    I think it was less of treating her like a "r****d" and more of a case of trying to be emotionally supportive and calming. I would imagine some folks would completely freak out (not necessarily in a good way) when hearing for the first time in their lives.
     
  13. Raven

    Raven Member

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    Science. Is. Awesome.
     
  14. Dr of Dunk

    Dr of Dunk Clutch Crew

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    That's the first thing I wondered.

    Awesome video, though. I also loved the ones where babies hear for the first time and their reactions.
     
  15. thabeet

    thabeet Member

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    my sister is deaf. this is touching.
     
  16. Yonkers

    Yonkers Member

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    If she's as hot as this one then touching should be involved.

    Kidding aside, have you guys looked into cochlear implants for her?
     
  17. Shroopy2

    Shroopy2 Member

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    (The immaturity and unfortunate thing myself included is that a less attractive person with the same issue would get less notice...) That moment is still awesome no matter who it happens to.
     
  18. RocketDonut

    RocketDonut Member

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    This was an episode of This American Life a while back. I tried to embed it below but if it doesn't work go here

    http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/411/first-contact

    It's the first story.

    <script src="http://audio.thisamericanlife.org/widget/widget.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
    <div id="this-american-life-411-0" class="this-american-life" style="width:540px;"></div>

    Transcript spoiled

    Scott Krepel Interview from TAL #411 1

    This American Life Transcript

    Prologue

    Broadcast June 25, 2010

    Episode #411: First Contact

    Ira Glass: Is that Marc?

    Marc Holmes: Yes, that’s Marc speaking for Scott.

    Ira Glass: So, Scott, you were born without hearing, right?

    Marc Holmes: That’s correct. Even though my parents didn’t know that
    until I was 18 months old.

    Ira Glass: This is a very strange interview because you can’t hear, and
    because I have a terrible cold, I can’t speak. [laughter]

    Marc Holmes: Marc gets the burden here. [laughter]

    [music]

    Ira Glass: I talked to Scott Krepel through his interpreter, Marc
    Holmes—they were in a studio in Washington, D.C.—about
    what happened when Scott was 11 or 12 the government
    approved the use of cochlear implants in children. So Scott
    got an implant. He was excited. He thought he’d fit in
    better at school, have more friends and date girls. And of
    course, he tried to imagine what it would be like to hear.
    Marc Holmes: To be honest, I didn’t know what to expect. The best analogy
    I can think of is maybe I was hoping that it would be like,
    that speech was like telepathy—instant thought transfer.

    [music]

    Ira Glass: So he had the surgery and then he went to the audiologist to
    configure the device. And what they do is that they hook up
    the implant to a machine.

    Marc Holmes: To send different frequencies, pulses, to try and stimulate
    the different parts in my cochlea, trying to figure out which
    one worked.

    Ira Glass: So the first sounds that you hear are those pulses?

    Marc Holmes: Yes.

    Ira Glass: And what do they sound like?

    Marc Holmes: The first time I heard something, I can remember very
    vividly, because it wasn’t really, it didn’t feel like hearing; it
    felt more like a vibration in my whole body. I was sitting
    there and nothing was happening, except for like a little
    thing that was tingling throughout my body. But eventually,
    after a while, the vibrations localized to my ears.

    Ira Glass: Oh, I see. The first vibrations, you couldn’t even tell that
    they were coming in through your ears.

    Marc Holmes: Right. I didn’t really know that it was sound itself at first.
    And eventually I came to realize, “Wait a minute, this must
    be it!”

    [electronic sounds, jagged speech]

    The audiologist just sent me on my way with the cochlear
    implant on.

    Ira Glass: We can only make an educated guess what this really
    sounds like. As best as we understand it from people who
    could once hear and then later in life got the implants,
    there’s a mechanical edge to the sound that you hear with
    these devices. Musical notes have to be nearly half an
    octave apart before you can tell the difference between the
    notes.

    Voices, people say that they sound like a robot Daffy Duck.
    But for Scott, whose brain had never developed the neural
    pathways to process audio, there were two big questions
    that went beyond all of that.

    Marc Holmes: One was that I couldn’t understand any of the sounds. It was
    just all noise. I did not have any ability to distinguish…

    Ira Glass: Am I understanding you right?: If someone was looking right
    at you and you were seeing their mouth moving, talking
    directly to you, you actually couldn’t tell which of the sounds
    was the sound of their voice coming out of their mouth?

    Marc Holmes: It would depend on the environment, because if it was an
    environment where there was other noises, then I wouldn’t
    really be able to pick out the person’s voice from that
    background.

    Ira Glass: If a dog barked or a horn honked, he couldn’t tell what the
    sounds were or what caused them. A doctor who does these
    implants told me about a very young patient of his, a child,
    who got the implant and then would just flush the toilet over
    and over, kind of amazed to connect the sound that it made
    with the action of the thing that they were seeing.
    I was interested in Scott because, although I know lots of
    deaf people say they have no need to learn to hear and
    they’re fine as they are, and they frown on this procedure,
    Scott is somebody who wanted this to work. He imagined
    what it was going to be like. And our show today, our radio
    show today is all stories where people are trying to make
    contact for the first time with something that they have
    never encountered or experienced.

    And Scott’s situation seemed like a particularly harsh
    example of that. The reality was so far from what he had
    expected. His second big problem with the implants was he
    didn’t have the ability to ignore any sounds.

    Marc Holmes: Well, if you’re sitting in your office and you listen carefully,
    you might hear things like the computer fan running or your
    own movements, or many different things, and most people
    have trained themselves to ignore those noises. I had none
    of that ability.

    So everything ended up overwhelming me, without me being
    able to stop it or ignore it.

    Ira Glass: For somebody like Scott, getting the implant at his age, his
    brain could never catch up and learn to process sound.
    After five years with the implant, it was still hard for him to
    focus if an air conditioner was on in the room. And as for
    recognizing words, if he was in a quiet room and his speech
    therapist would say a word to him, he could actually pick
    out the word from a list of words that were sitting in front
    of him, and that’s about as good as it got.

    So at the end of high school he stopped using the implant,
    and he doesn’t miss it. The only time he really liked it, he
    says, was that very first day, when he had his first contact
    with sound.

    Marc Holmes: I think the first time I heard, that was cool. Things like, “Oh,
    I can clink the cookie jar,” but it got old very fast.

    Ira Glass: Today on our show, First Contact, we have three stories of
    people in that frightening, thrilling first moment of
    encounter, that leap into the unknown. Mike Birbiglia talks
    about an achievement that was literally years in the
    making for him. We have somebody also chatting his way
    into the lives of people very far away in the middle of a war.
    We have scientists pondering exactly what we should say
    the very first time we find extraterrestrials to talk to, and
    what boneheaded things people want to say to them. From
    WBEZ Chicago, it’s This American Life distributed by Public
    Radio International, I’m Ira Glass. Still with a little cold
    this week, but feeling just fine. Stay with us.
    [music]
     
  19. the futants

    the futants Member

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    For those of you questioning her clear speech, the article in the link says:



    She says on her YouTube channel that she's worn hearing aids since she was two years old and has gotten by on reading lips. Churman goes on to explain the background behind her clear speech:

    "My whole life I've been complimented on how well I speak. I don't really have an answer for you other than I have always had a passion for reading, grammar, and English. My hearing loss was/is considered severe to profound. I've worked very hard to be able to interact and blend in.....only thing I can say is 'God is good'."
     
  20. rimbaud

    rimbaud Member
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    If she has been wearing aids since 2 then she has been hearing something. Maybe the new implant just made things more clear and defined? Regardless, her speech is too good for a lifelong hearing-impaired person and the explanation in the article doesn't really explain anything. My mother is a speech pathologist and I have never heard anyone at any point of the deaf scale with such clear speech. Even a minor impairment can distort enough to mess up patterns and enunciation. I will ask her if she knows what the odds might be.
     

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