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Students at Helen Keller National Center Use Sorenson Video Relay Service to Instantaneously Communicate with the Hearing World.


Business Editors/Education Writers/High-Tech Writers

SANDS POINT, N.Y. & SALT LAKE CITY--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 3, 2004

Sorenson VP-100 Videophone (1) (VideoPhone) A line of videophones (definition #1 below) from AT&T that were introduced in the early 1990s and later pulled off the market due to poor sales. The first models came with a price tag above $1,000, and a pair were needed. See Picturephone.  Connected to a 35" TV Enables

Deaf-Blind Students with Usable Vision to Place Video Relay Calls

The Helen Keller National Center (HKNC HKNC Helen Keller National Center ), a training center for individuals ranging in age from 16 to senior citizens who are deaf-blind, announced they are utilizing Sorenson Video Relay Service A Video Relay Service (VRS) is a telecommunication service that allows deaf, hard of hearing and speech-disabled individuals to communicate over the phone with hearing people in real-time, using a sign language interpreter. In America, the service is regulated by the FCC. (TM) (VRS (Video Relay Service) A communications service for the hearing or speech impaired. A VRS is the video counterpart of a TTY relay service, in which the user types on a terminal, and the relay operator speaks the messages to the recipient (see TDD/TTY). ) from Sorenson Media Sorenson Media is a software company working in the multimedia area. They are known as the creators of the Sorenson Spark video codec. (R). Sorenson VRS offers deaf-blind individuals with usable vision another option when conversing with hearing friends, family, and business associates. Sorenson VRS gives these users the opportunity to become more independent by providing them with the ability to hold private conservations over a videophone; something many of these individuals never experienced prior to Sorenson VRS.

"Many HKNC students use Sorenson VRS through the use of a Sorenson VP-100(TM) videophone connected to a 35-inch television," said James R. Feldmann, senior instructor and technology support specialist at HKNC. "The Sorenson VP-100 videophone enables users to enlarge the video screen to full view on a 35-inch TV. Other solutions, which traditionally have been for PC users, only produce small postage-size video images that are extremely challenging for deaf-blind individuals with usable vision to decipher. By having such a large image on the screen, deaf-blind students with usable vision are able to see the interpreter, read American Sign Language American Sign Language
n.
The primary sign language used by deaf and hearing-impaired people in the United States and Canada.


American Sign Language (ASL),
n.
 (ASL ASL - Algebraic Specification Language ) and sign a reply."

Sorenson VRS facilitates natural communication between deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals with the hearing world. Using the Sorenson VP-100 videophone appliance connected to a TV, or a personal computer equipped with a Web camera and Sorenson EnVision(R) SL video relay software or Microsoft(R) NetMeeting(R), both deaf and hard-of-hearing users are able to place calls through an ASL interpreter over a broadband Internet See broadband.  connection.

Zachary Bradley, a 33-year-old student at HKNC, said he used Sorenson VRS for the first time while at HKNC. Bradley commented, "I am amazed at Sorenson VRS. Because of the high quality of the video, the interpreter easily reads what I'm signing while simultaneously translating and speaking to the (hearing) person that I called, and vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. . It makes it easy to communicate with anyone quickly."

Feldmann added, "Because ASL is their primary method of communication, they prefer to communicate in ASL instead of writing and typing in the spoken English language English language, member of the West Germanic group of the Germanic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see Germanic languages). Spoken by about 470 million people throughout the world, English is the official language of about 45 nations. . Just as hearing people prefer spoken language the students are thrilled to use Sorenson VRS to communicate in their own native language. In addition, they are able to communicate much more efficiently by signing and they don't have to use magnified screens for reading print on a small computer screen."

William "Bill" Gerbasi, a 54-year-old student at HKNC, is learning independent living skills while his wife and daughter are back home in Ohio. Gerbasi experiences difficulty when using a text-based telephone (TTY (TeleTYpewriter) See teletypewriter and TDD/TTY.

(hardware) tty - /tit'ee/ (ITS pronunciation, but some Unix people say it this way as well; this pronunciation is not considered to have sexual undertones), /T T Y/

1. teletypewriter.

2.
) and computer messaging because of his low vision and limited computer skills. "Sometimes TTY would be impossible for me to read with such restricted vision," said Gerbasi. "Also, with Sorenson VRS I am able to communicate with my wife and daughter. It's so wonderful to experience that while I'm away at HKNC."

Paul Bogan, a 22-year-old student at HKNC preparing to go to college mentioned, "It's great to see an interpreter and to visually experience the emotions, gestures and ideas of a call. Sorenson VRS makes a difference for the better."

Deaf-blind consumers with no or little vision may also use the Sorenson VRS. "In these cases, we have on-site tactual tac·tu·al
adj.
Tactile.
 interpreting support for students to make calls on the Sorenson VRS," said Feldmann. "This gives deaf-blind individuals further confidence and dignity since they are able to express themselves."

"Sorenson Media is delighted to have found a communication solution for many of the students at HKNC," said James Lee Sorenson, CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  at Sorenson Media. "We are excited to be part of the technology that is opening new doors for individuals who are deaf-blind and have usable vision."

About The Helen Keller National Center

The mission of the Helen Keller National Center for Deaf-Blind Youths and Adults (HKNC) is to enable each person who is deaf-blind to live and work in his or her community of choice. It provides comprehensive vocational rehabilitation training at its headquarters in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 and assistance with job and residential placements when training is completed. Services in the field include 10 regional offices, over 40 affiliated agencies, a national training team and an older adult program. HKNC is a partner in the National Technical Assistance Consortium for Children and Young Adults Who Are Deaf-Blind and with DB-LINK, a clearinghouse for information on deaf-blindness. HKNC also maintains a national registry of individuals who are deaf-blind.

About Sorenson Media

Sorenson Media (www.sorenson.com and www.sorensonvrs.com) is the recognized technology leader in video services, video compression and video communication to improve the quality of communication over the Internet. The company's products and services include the industry's highest-quality video relay service, award winning video compression solutions, and the market-leading broadband Internet videophone technology.

(C) 2004 Sorenson Media. All products and brand names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Date:Feb 3, 2004
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