DeafDigest - 28 December 2017

DeafDigest Mid-Week edition - December 28, 2017   -- a surprising comment about the deaf and the travel Deaf people love to travel. We have quite a few deaf travel tours; we have deaf people that are travel professionals; we even have one deaf man that traveled to 107 nations, and so on. Yet, it is surprising to see a comment by someone: I think that deaf people often think that it's complicated to leave the house, because they need support That comment was not made by a hearing person but by a deaf man! A picture is at: http://deafdigest.com/fascinating-way-to-travel/   -- horror story in hospital A deaf person was admitted to a hospital. He requested an interpreter; the interpreter showed up and interpreted the communications betweeen the doctor and the deaf patient. The interpreter then left for his next assignment. Suddenly the deaf person became ill; the doctor rushed to his bed, but no interpreter was around to explain what was wrong. These are nightmares that hospitals hate to deal with.   -- deaf immigrants learning ASL One ASL teacher said that many deaf immigrants have never been formally educated. The ASL they learn becomes their first language. This comment was made by ASL teacher, not in USA but in Canada. Because of tougher laws on immigration in USA, more deaf immigrants instead go to Canada.   Latest deaf jobs - today's update http://deafdigest.com/category/jobs/ Barry's collections of past articles (with today's update) -- interpreter and the deaf http://deafdigest.com/collections/barrys-collections/ 12/24/17 Blue and Gold editions at: http://deafdigest.com/newsletters/   -- helping ASL and get paid for it ASL signers needed to help with a project about fingerspelling We are researchers in the sign language linguistics lab at the University of Chicago (Prof. Diane Brentari, Director), seeking ASL signers to help us with research about fingerspelling in ASL. Signers will be paid to help us annotate examples of fingerspelling from videos, using Amazon’s Mechanical Turk service. These annotations will contribute to a project working towards developing software that can interpret fingerspelling automatically from videos. Description of work -- As a worker on the project, you would watch videos in ASL and mark the fingerspelling you see in each video. -- All work is done on Amazon’s Mechanical Turk service and workers on the project are paid for each video they complete. -- This is a great way to earn some extra money, and can be done anytime and from anywhere.   How do you start? 1. Create an account as a worker on Amazon’s Mechanical Turk at: ty https://www.mturk.com/worker 2. Search for: ASL Fingerspelling Project 3. Complete a short training 4. Begin annotating videos Have questions or want to learn more? Email us at asl.fingerspelling.project@gmail.com

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