
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Today on “Post Reports,” how artificial intelligence can re-create voices that may have otherwise been lost to disease.
Read more:
When Mark Dyer was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) last year, he started on a difficult checklist. He got his will in order; he got set up to receive Social Security and disability benefits. But of all the things Mark had to do to get ready for life with ALS, there was one thing he found himself putting off: voice- and phrase-banking.
These technologies allow people with ALS, who may eventually lose the ability to speak, to communicate using a recorded, synthetic version of their own voice. And artificial intelligence is allowing ALS patients to sound more like themselves.
Today on “Post Reports,” we talk to reporter Amanda Morris about the technology that preserves voices that would otherwise be lost to disease. We explore what improvements to this technology mean for the mental health of the patients using synthetic voices.
“We often talk about artificial intelligence in a negative way,” Morris says. “But what I thought was interesting about this story is that we look at some of the positive impacts that artificial intelligence is having on people who have different conditions and disabilities. And, sometimes I think it’s nice to tell a good story.”
By The Washington Post4.2
51825,182 ratings
Today on “Post Reports,” how artificial intelligence can re-create voices that may have otherwise been lost to disease.
Read more:
When Mark Dyer was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) last year, he started on a difficult checklist. He got his will in order; he got set up to receive Social Security and disability benefits. But of all the things Mark had to do to get ready for life with ALS, there was one thing he found himself putting off: voice- and phrase-banking.
These technologies allow people with ALS, who may eventually lose the ability to speak, to communicate using a recorded, synthetic version of their own voice. And artificial intelligence is allowing ALS patients to sound more like themselves.
Today on “Post Reports,” we talk to reporter Amanda Morris about the technology that preserves voices that would otherwise be lost to disease. We explore what improvements to this technology mean for the mental health of the patients using synthetic voices.
“We often talk about artificial intelligence in a negative way,” Morris says. “But what I thought was interesting about this story is that we look at some of the positive impacts that artificial intelligence is having on people who have different conditions and disabilities. And, sometimes I think it’s nice to tell a good story.”

6,801 Listeners

25,872 Listeners

4,042 Listeners

3,644 Listeners

1,382 Listeners

4,443 Listeners

112,664 Listeners

56,879 Listeners

2,477 Listeners

2,336 Listeners

107 Listeners

10,251 Listeners

7,216 Listeners

2,408 Listeners

16,352 Listeners

2,779 Listeners

6,431 Listeners

2,371 Listeners

16,132 Listeners

232 Listeners

295 Listeners

1,241 Listeners

995 Listeners

406 Listeners

349 Listeners

154 Listeners

57 Listeners

32 Listeners

619 Listeners