Monday, March 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada's Down Syndrome Community Helps Teach Google How To Understand Speech

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Nov, 2019 09:17 PM

    VANCOUVER - Anyone who's been frustrated with digital voice assistants Google, Alexa or Siri misunderstanding commands to play a certain song or access online information may find themselves pointlessly arguing with technology, but imagine the ubiquitous devices messing up every third word you say.

     

    That's what Google estimates people with Down syndrome experience because of speech difficulties associated with physiological differences in their mouths.

     

    The Canadian Down Syndrome Society launched a campaign this week to help Google improve its voice-recognition technology by encouraging people with the condition to record phrases online as part of Project Understood to train the tech giant's technology to better understand those with speech impairments.

     

    Matthew MacNeil, 29, volunteered to donate his voice by logging on to a website and recording phrases such as "the boy ran down the path," "flowers grow in a garden" and "strawberry jam is sweet."

     

    The society partnered with Google, which launched Project Euphonia last year to improve their voice-recognition systems for people with speech impairment, starting with those who have amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as ALS or Lou Gehrig's disease, which gradually weakens muscles and affects speech.

     

    MacNeil's efforts to use a digital voice assistant have been frustrating.

     

    "I had to repeat myself many times. Then I gave up," he said from Tillsonburg, Ont.

     

    The goal is to use the technology to become more independent, said MacNeil, who works at a grocery store collecting carts, a word he substituted after "buggies" wasn't understood.

     

    That's something he's experienced multiple times with the Google Home assistant, which mistook his hometown of Tillsonburg as "smoke" and the Ontario city of Peterborough as "people" before announcing: "My apologies. I don't understand."

     

    Ed Casagrande, chair of the Canadian Down Syndrome Society, said a three-month trial had already been done with Google before this week's campaign began, as 10 people with Down syndrome recorded an average of 1,500 phrases each into the online platform.

     

    He said people with the condition anywhere in the world could use the Project Understood site, or Project Euphonia, to record their voice and add to a growing database. Those who participate must be aged 18 or over.

     

    Casagrande has great hopes for how better voice-recognition technology could one day help his six-year-old daughter Emma, who has Down syndrome.

     

    "When I think about my daughter and the future and in speaking with people with Down syndrome what I hear is the same thing as a typical person in terms of wanting to be independent and work and socialize and have relationships," he said from Guelph, Ont.

     

    "I just feel that this technology will allow a person with Down syndrome to get one step closer to independence so that when my daughter is ready to work, 20 years from now, she's able to speak into some voice technology device to call that driverless car to pick her up to bring her to work or bring her back home, or to check the weather and schedule appointments or what have you."

     

    Julie Cattiau, product manager of Google's artificial intelligence team, said millions of voices were recorded for the company's voice-recognition systems for users with no accent or speech difficulties, so a system that would understand the speech patterns of people with various disabilities will need even more recordings and transcriptions of what is being said in order to work.

     

    "Our goal is that in the future, hopefully, Google products can work a lot better for people, even if they have speech that is impaired or that sounds different because of a neurological condition, such as Down syndrome or ALS," she said.

     

    "We will be collecting phrases for as long as it takes for us to make progress," Cattiau said. "Until we have a large enough data set we won't be able to answer questions such as do we need to train models for individual people or can people benefit from other people's voice recordings, which, of course, is the dream because that's a much more scalable approach."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Brain Activity 'Dampened' By Vaped THC, Similar To Those With Schizophrenia: Study

    A new study by Ontario researchers suggests that brain activity in rats exposed a single time to THC — the vapourized psychoactive component of marijuana — is similar to those with schizophrenia and cannabis-induced psychosis.

    Brain Activity 'Dampened' By Vaped THC, Similar To Those With Schizophrenia: Study

    Trudeau's Behaviour Panned By Alberta Premier Jason Kenney Who Pumps Up Scheer Instead

    Jason Kenney, who is just back from a tour urging investment in Alberta's energy sector, says the prime minister's embarrassing behaviour is "frankly bizarre."    

    Trudeau's Behaviour Panned By Alberta Premier Jason Kenney Who Pumps Up Scheer Instead

    Give Severely Addicted Drug Users Injectable Medical-Grade Heroin: Guideline

    Dr. Nadia Fairbairn, an addiction specialist at St. Paul's Hospital, said a guideline published Monday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal outlines best practices for innovative treatment that has been lacking during an overdose crisis that claimed 4,460 lives in Canada last year.

    Give Severely Addicted Drug Users Injectable Medical-Grade Heroin: Guideline

    Hotel Strike In Vancouver Expands To Fourth Property, Hitting Hotel Georgia

    A strike by workers at high-end Vancouver hotels has spread to a fourth property as unionized staff at the Rosewood Hotel Georgia have launched job action.    

    Hotel Strike In Vancouver Expands To Fourth Property, Hitting Hotel Georgia

    Meng Wanzhou's Case Returns To Court Today

    In court documents released last month, the defence has argued Meng was unlawfully detained at Vancouver's airport last December at the direction of American authorities.

    Meng Wanzhou's Case Returns To Court Today

    B.C. Auditor Says Tighter Expense Rules, Oversight Needed At B.C. Legislature

    VICTORIA - British Columbia's auditor general says the province's legislature must set higher standards for expense reporting by top administrative officials following allegations of spending abuses made by Speaker Darryl Plecas.    

    B.C. Auditor Says Tighter Expense Rules, Oversight Needed At B.C. Legislature