Lame infomercial for his company services. Not clear that it is better than any other system used spaced repetition - just throw in the magic buzzword "AI" and everyone is wowed. Not me
The TOEIC exam is not a very good measure of a learner's language learning progress according to Childs (1995), so the AI hasn't really proved anything. What's the study mentioned in the presentation?
They must have recorded it with Tufo, couldn't' find a decent potato. Jokes aside, they are in Japan, couldn't' find a Canon with a stand. The moment his image showed behind in a 3d mirror theme, I stopped understanding.
Imagine if this takes off and can be applied to subjects other than language learning. Just like cab drivers and translators, you can add teachers to the list of professions that will most likely be eliminated by AI.
Perhaps the jobs will be taken, but I'd rather just die than let AI do any possible task that takes cognitive power. Of course they can help, but I can't help but think that much of our brain's functions will be essentially outsourced to machines, and is you don't use it, you lose it. Will be a sad state of humanity. This is why I will learn endeavour to elarn and maintain languages in my braaaiin
Very interesting. However, learning any language starts by proper pronunciation. Then knowing ( and practicing) the influence of each letter sound {phoneme} at the end of a word to the first one of the next adjacent word i.e. mastering the phonetics and phonology of that language. I am pretty sure that you know that very well. Did you resolved that problem or not? I will appreciate it very much , if you elaborated a little bit more about how you tackled that through AI. For your information, I have a research idea for overcoming this barrier to teach Non - Arabic speakers how to master the Arabic phonemes that are not in there mother tongue. For example, the /R/ for peoples from east Asian countries - as you know they pronounce it as / L/. And of course to proceed for mastering the Arabic phonology. the idea includes many interdisciplinary branches of relating sciences, using their different research outcomes, exploiting the enormous facilities given by the digital techniques available at the present and future.
"East Asian" - no, sorry. For the Chinese it's a problem, that's true, since their language doesn't have this sound (the letter R in Pinyin is assigned to quite a different sound). However, Tagalog has both L and R. Japanese does have an R sound (and no L), but Japanese usually don't have problems to pronounce it or to distinguish it from R). Corean has neither L nor R, but in my experience Coreans are also very well able to distinguish them and also to pronounce them. They confuse b/p/f/v.