A Rice Professor Made It His Mission To Modernize The Phonetic Alphabet For Braille Readers
A set of symbols known as the International Phonetic Alphabet is commonly used to determine what speech sounds like. The IPA is used for nearly 7,000 languages around the world. If youve encountered pronunciation guides online, youve used the IPA. But the Braille version of the IPA hadnt been updated for 75 years until a Houston-area professor made it his mission to change that.
Robert Englebretson is chair of the Linguistics Department and a professor at Rice University. He says discrepancies between the print version of the IPA and the older Braille one had become severe by the time he got involved in the project. And differences between U.S. Braille and British/European Braille made the discrepancies even greater.
There frankly arent that many Braille readers who are in the fields of linguistics or speech sciences, and maybe it just wasnt on anyones radar, Englebretson says.
For Englebretson, updating the Braille version of the IPA was a matter of personal and professional interest. Hes both a linguistics professor and a Braille reader, who didnt have access to an updated IPA when he began his linguistics studies.
Read more: https://www.texasstandard.org/stories/after-75-years-an-update-brings-the-phonetic-alphabet-to-braille-readers/