U of T researchers create mobile app that gives voice to people with communications challenges

MyVoice CEO Alexander Levy
For those living with aphasia, autism and other conditions that affect speech ability, communicating with friends and loved ones can be a challenge. MyVoice, a mobile app and server system that operates on iPhone and Android devices, gives users with these conditions a voice by simply tapping words and pictures on a screen.
“People living with aphasia talk about the fear and isolation they sometimes feel because they cannot communicate as they once did,” said aphasia researcher and post-doctoral fellow Alexandra Carling-Rowland. “MyVoice will help to increase communication confidence, participation and independence.”
Launching today, MyVoice is the first assistive and augmentative communication device to introduce location-aware vocabulary that suggests useful words and phrases based on a user’s location. At Tim Horton’s, for example, MyVoice instantly generates items like “Timbits” and “Double Double” for use in conversation.
MyVoice was developed within the Technologies for Aging Gracefully Lab (TAGlab), under the direction of Professor Ron Baecker in the Department of Computer Science. (Baecker also won a Connaught Fund Innovation Award for this project.) The mandate of the TAGlab is to facilitate research and development to support aging throughout the life course. The lab identifies “sweet spots” where technology seems relevant to human need, then envisions ways in which the technology could address those needs. The lab then designs and tests prototypes. The technology will be further supported through the University of Toronto Innovations and Partnerships Office (IPO) with respect to partnerships, commercialization and funding.
“This is an excellent example of how university research makes a direct and positive impact on the challenges that face people around the world,” said Professor Paul Young, vice-president (research). “MyVoice is just one of the many projects our Innovations and Partnerships Office is developing with U of T faculty so we can move our brilliant research from our campuses to the global marketplace.”
MyVoice is dramatically more affordable than traditional speaking aids. Where traditional aids average in cost at $12,000, MyVoice allows users to try the technology for free and upgrade to a full featured version for a $30 monthly subscription cost.
“More than 90 per cent of people with communication challenges use primitive communication aids, or no aids at all,” said MyVoice CEO Alexander Levy, the project lead at the TAGlab. “MyVoice will always be accessible to anyone with a communication challenge.”
Along with already received funding from Google, Android and NSERC, MyVoice has received requests from institutions, collaborators and school boards to trial the technology with their constituents. The device is currently in use at a school in the Toronto District School Board.
“I was completely blown away by MyVoice,” said Professor Rhonda McEwen of the Faculty of Information. “It absolutely met so many deficits I had in current research with other applications I was using.
“Some children have no verbal communication. MyVoice gives them a chance to cross closer to our world, where we have words and voices.”
To learn more about MyVoice, visit http://www.myvoiceaac.com.
Tags: Commercialization, Feature Stories, Science, science & technology


This is also useful for immigrants that could not learn to speak english for different reasons as dilexia or other learning disabilities.
Good job!