The phrase
"deaf people" refers to individuals who are unable to hear sounds like other people can. They may communicate through sign language or use other methods to understand and interact with the world.
Full definition
It is challenging
for deaf people to learn a sound - based language, since they are physically not able to hear those sounds.
The example is the children
of deaf people who use «real» sign language, who learn this instead of spoken language.
This performance was in stark contrast to a fourth group of
deaf people who could hear as children, but lost their hearing between the ages of nine and fifteen through illness.
This led you to becoming a trainer for businesses to learn how to work best
with deaf people.
They provide
many deaf people with a significantly improved ability for oral understanding and thus a considerable boost to their quality of life.
Back in the classroom, many
deaf people do not use sign language and choose to lip - read instead.
Animals are also being trained to
help deaf people to identify and react to signals they can not normally perceive.
Back in the 1980s, there wasn't a lot of technology available to
enable deaf people to communicate easily with hearing people.
My next venture is a new nationwide real estate seminar business focused on teaching
deaf people how to buy and sell real estate.
If it is that easy why can't left handed people just choose to write with their right hand, or
deaf people just choose to hear, etc?
The centre is about to start a two - year project adapting the tutor
for deaf people.
This is because it does not address a number of issues on disability such as, specific rights
of deaf people, justice, health, employment and a number of other fundamental freedoms.
Before the internet existed as we know it today,
deaf people didn't have an easy way to communicate long distance.
Additionally, the Fifth Judicial Circuit provides interpreter services and reasonable accommodations for
deaf persons in all cases in accordance with section 90.6063, Florida Statutes, and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
A cochlear implant is an electronic device capable of restoring hearing in a profoundly
deaf person by directly stimulating the nerve endings in the inner ear.
They're based out of London and speak a lot about their experiences abroad
as deaf people.
I asked how do
deaf people hear god and what about mass hysteria and you laugh about clouds.
Payne, who is a fan of the Facebook page Deaf International FaceTime Exchange, has used FaceTime to communicate with
other deaf people as far away as Scotland.
Today, the 150 or
so deaf people of Al - Sayyid include the second generation, men and women in their thirties and forties; and the third generation, their children.
Already, researchers have developed devices such as deep brain stimulators for treating Parkinson's disease, cochlear implants for restoring minimal hearing in
profoundly deaf people, and a computer interface called BrainGate that allows fully paralyzed individuals to accomplish simple tasks via a robotic arm.
It has partnered up with national charities, organisations and other legal firms to offer legal services tailored for clients with hearing difficulties, and will launch a website next week that uses video - sharing site SignTube, which helps
deaf people communicate.
Apple's entry into this sector could disrupt the hearing aid industry and be a godsend for
deaf people like me.
We can also include this short film, titled Dawn of the Deaf, about a
few deaf people who must band together to survive in a zombie apocalypse - though it's much more about the relationship the main girl has with everyone in her life.
How blind and
deaf people approach a cognitive test regarded as a milestone in human development has provided clues to how we deduce what others are thinking.
To
inform deaf people quickly in cases where there is no interpreter on hand, researchers are working on a novel approach to provide content.
A key challenge is that, at least in developed countries,
deaf people tend to marry each other, thus mingling many genes for impaired hearing.
Because deaf people lack access to such potentially life - saving cues, a group of researchers from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) in Daejeon built a pair of glasses which allows the wearer to «see» when a loud sound is made, and gives an indication of where it came from.
(Just such a contact language, called International Sign Pidgin, has developed over the years at places like sign - linguistics meetings,
where deaf people from many countries converge.)
By discovering more about
when deaf people vocalise instinctively and when they need to learn, Sauter says, it may be possible to better interpret distress calls from deaf infants.
Talk with Your Hands, the third of four Cambridge Shorts films, explores the richness of sensory perception in interviews with blind and
deaf people together with insights from neuroscientists.
Because I am a religious person, and because without this hearing aid I am almost deaf, the stories of Jesus
healing deaf people are particularly meaningful and poignant to me.
Whereas the researchers were expecting that the subjects would be slower and less accurate that those in a control group of people without any hearing difficulty, to their surprise they found that
certain deaf people completed the task quicker and more accurately than their normo - hearing counterparts.
Researchers hope that through optogenetics, they can use micro-LED lights to make better cochlear implants than those used by
deaf people today.
COCHLEAR implants have helped thousands of
deaf people around the world hear for the first time.
Perhaps the most successful bionic device ever, cochlear implants are designed to restore hearing in
chronically deaf people.
Such devices include cochlear implants that have enabled thousands of
previously deaf people to hear again and, more recently, retinal implants that return sight to the blind.
By tapping into a sense that remains intact, Meijer's machine and others like it could give blind and
deaf people glimpses and whispers of a sensory realm denied them at the moment.
Iain Poplett, a research fellow at King's College London working on nuclear quadrupole resonance spectroscopy, says he has missed out on jobs because employers used health and safety regulations as an excuse for not
employing deaf people.