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NeuralMorse – reinventing Morse code with neural networks

2 pointsby mhagiwaraover 3 years ago

1 comment

ksajover 3 years ago
&quot;A typical elementary student in counties where Chinese characters are used (mainly China and Japan) learns 1,000 to 2,000 characters by the time they reach the sixth grade.&quot;<p>I&#x27;m guessing that the author is trying to say that it is easy enough for a 12 year old to accomplish.<p>But the children don&#x27;t learn those 1000-2000 characters <i>when</i> they are 12. If they started learning characters from 5 years old (kindergarten), then it takes a few hours a day over 7 years, during the time of life one is typically a language sponge, to pick up NeuralMorse.<p>Also, if I were to do this, I would make the distance between each of the notes a different number of steps. This would help facilitate remembering words based on their &quot;song&quot; while making it impossible to accidentally transpose. For example, abab should not be the same intervals as cdcd.<p>The author mentioned that the number of notes was constrained because too many notes would require perfect pitch. I&#x27;d say the same goes when there is not enough variation of intervals. In the case the shared ab and cd interval is missing out on an opportunity for clarity.<p>When all the intervals are different, perfect pitch isn&#x27;t necessary to determine whether an incoming message is starting on ab or dc. You just need to hear any other note to figure it out.<p>A useful side effect is that the actual starting pitch is then made irrelevant, making it less prone to doppler effects... just keep the intervals intact.