Artificial Intelligence and the Economy Tackling hearing loss

#artificialintelligence 

These models are computer algorithms, or smart apps, that seek to give computers the ability to learn like children for a variety of tasks. Here, we highlight how an author's work may solve a particular set of real-world tasks or problems. By doing this, we aim to foster more and more machine, learning works, to be done by more and more Jamaican people. Today, we'll highlight the machine-learning work, a paper/algorithm called'Modelling Sensorineural Hearing-impaired Listeners' Perception of Speaker Intelligibility in Noise", by UWI lecturers Dr Lindon W. Falconer, Dr AndrÈ Coy, and their overseas colleague, Professor Jon Barker. Jordan: How would you describe your work? Dr Coy, et al: Disabling hearing loss is a major challenge faced by many individuals in societies throughout the world. The World Health Organization (WHO) has reported that approximately 6.1 per cent of the world's population has disabling hearing loss, and about 93 per cent of these people are adults.