Vibrating vests translate music for deaf concertgoers
- Audio expert Patrick Hanlon programs haptic suits to enable deaf and hard of hearing concertgoers to experience orchestral music by translating the music into vibrations that can be felt throughout the body.
- The haptic vests, along with bands at the wrists or ankles, provide a full-body experience that creates sensations and feelings evoked by music.
- The use of haptic technology in live music performances aims to improve inclusivity and offer new opportunities for deaf individuals to develop auditory memory through different sensations.
6 Articles
6 Articles
Vibrating vests translate music for deaf concertgoers
The violins reverberate in the ribcage, while cello and bass are felt a little further down, with horns in the shoulders and, more often than not, soloists in the wrists.That's one way audio expert Patrick Hanlon programs haptic suits, designed to enable concertgoers who are deaf or hard of hearing to experience orchestral music, as initiatives to improve inclusivity at live music performances break new ground.At a recent classical concert at Ma…
Vibrating vests translate music for deaf concertgoers
Concertgoers in New York put on haptic fits, which translate music into vibrations on the physique, created for the deaf group. The violins reverberate within the ribcage, whereas cello and bass are felt slightly additional down, with horns within the shoulders and, most of the time, soloists within the wrists. That is a method audio skilled Patrick Hanlon applications haptic fits, designed to allow concertgoers who’re deaf or laborious of li…
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