Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Digital Subscription
    • Advertisement
    • Contact Us
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    The Tennessee TribuneThe Tennessee Tribune
    Advertise With Us
    • Home
      • COVID-19 Resource Center
        • Dr. Henry Louis Gates’ PSA Radio
      • Featured
    • News
      • State
      • Local
      • National/International News
      • Global
      • Business
        • Commentary
        • Finance
        • Local Business
      • Investigative Stories
        • Affordable Housing
        • DCS Investigation
        • Gentrification
    • Editorial
      • National Politics
      • Local News
      • Local Editorial
      • Political Editorial
      • Editorial Cartoons
      • Cycle of Shame
    • Community
      • History
      • Tennessee
        • Chattanooga
        • Clarksville
        • Knoxville
        • Memphis
      • Public Notices
      • Women
        • Let’s Talk with Ms. June
    • Education
      • College
        • American Baptist College
        • Belmont University
        • Fisk
        • HBCU
        • Meharry
        • MTSU
        • University of Tennessee
        • TSU
        • Vanderbilt
      • Elementary
      • High School
    • Lifestyle
      • Art
      • Auto
      • Tribune Travel
      • Entertainment
        • 5 Questions With
        • Books
        • Events
        • Film Review
        • Local Entertainment
      • Family
      • Food
        • Drinks
      • Health & Wellness
      • Home & Garden
      • Featured Books
    • Religion
      • National Religion
      • Local Religion
      • Obituaries
        • National Obituaries
        • Local Obituaries
      • Faith Commentary
    • Sports
      • MLB
        • Sounds
      • NBA
      • NCAA
      • NFL
        • Predators
        • Titans
      • NHL
      • Other Sports
      • Golf
      • Professional Sports
      • Sports Commentary
      • Metro Sports
    • Media
      • Video
      • Photo Galleries
      • Take 10
      • Trending With The Tribune
    • Classified
    • Obituaries
      • Local Obituaries
      • National Obituaries
    The Tennessee TribuneThe Tennessee Tribune
    National/International News

    Artificial Intelligence Ramps Up Speech Therapy Success

    zenger.newsBy zenger.newsApril 27, 2021No Comments7 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Better Hearing and Speech Month in May provides a good opportunity to look at three Israeli companies bringing the power of artificial intelligence to the $4 billion speech therapy market.

    Approximately 1.5 billion people globally deal with voice, speech or language impairments. For therapy to be effective, it must be supported by consistent at-home practice, and that is one of the myriad ways artificial intelligence can help.

    TikTalk

    Speech language pathologists use games and props to engage children in their sessions. TikTalk’s cloud-based virtual assistant brings that aspect home, motivating kindergartners to sixth graders to practice the articulation skills they’re learning in speech therapy consistently and accurately.

    TikTalk is geared specifically to children with speech-sound disorders such as articulation and phonological processing disorders, said Nir Gamliel, U.S. head of business development at TikTalk2me, the company that developed TikTalk.

    TikTalk is geared specifically to children with speech-sound disorders. (TikTalk screenshot)

    The platform incorporates eight customized video games to play on a tablet, programmed by the speech language pathologists to encourage practicing the target sounds and providing real-time or follow-up feedback.

    “In therapy you establish the sound and teach the child how to make the sound. Where we get stuck is practicing,” said Sandra Laserson, an Ohio-based speech language pathologist who helped the Jerusalem development team create TikTalk. “Being with the therapist 30 minutes a week won’t do it.”

    Laserson said that the time available for therapy to be successful is limited by the child’s motivation and the parents’ financial and emotional resources.

    “At the same time, children have little inclination or opportunity to accurately practice their speech sounds outside of therapy. This solution improves both of those issues. The results of our pilots with about 60 kids in Maryland and Ohio confirm that,” she said.

    “With this system, you assign a customized home practice quickly and easily through a portal. The child has a choice of games and no matter which one is chosen, what you have programmed for them is incorporated into the game in a different way.”

    Practiced sounds are recorded and stored in the cloud so the speech language pathologist can monitor progress and adjust accordingly. Parents can also receive the recordings to follow their child’s progress.

    The company’s co-founders, Raphael Nassi and Bentzi Treger, come from a background in artificial intelligence and speech recognition, Gamliel said.

    TikTalk’s digital articulation dropdown menu. (Courtesy of TikTalk2me)

    TikTalk was launched commercially in January to agencies, private-practice speech language pathologists and school systems on a monthly or yearly license basis. “Parents can ask their speech language pathologist about it,” said Gamliel.

    The 10-person Israeli team is developing additional games for other kinds of speech-sound disorders and for kids who speak other languages, including Spanish.

    The company received Israeli funding from the Israel Innovation Authority, eHealthVentures, Maccabi Health Fund and Shenhav Investments and is affiliated with the Maryland-Israel Development Center.

    A successful Israeli pilot of TikTalk in four preschools in Ma’aleh Adumim is under evaluation at the Education Ministry for possible nationwide rollout, said Shay Beyski, customer success director.

    “After several months, the speech language pathologist using the system said she saw the enthusiasm and motivation of the kids. Even the preschool director saw that kids who didn’t want to participate in speech therapy sessions before now want to do it,” he says.

    Novotalk

    Novotalk began in 2014 as an online companion to Hadassah University Medical Center’s fluency-shaping program for people who stutter.

    The on-demand platform enables clients to practice 24/7 at their own pace and allows therapists to monitor progress and tweak the exercises.

    Gradually, Novotalk expanded into an accessible and affordable self-directed speech therapy program for stuttering and other types of speech-language disorders.

    “The concept of self-directed means you’re not dependent on the availability of clinicians,” said Novotalk chairman Zohar Beeri.

    The system’s artificial intelligence uses collected data on each user’s practice sessions to adjust the difficulty of the exercises, and the clinician also can do that manually. Automatic feedback is provided to each user.

    Novotalk supports a variety of speech programs at Hadassah in Jerusalem and has an exclusive joint venture agreement with Mount Sinai Health System in New York “to commercialize innovative speech and language solutions to address the therapeutic needs of patients with speech impairments in the United States and Canada.”

    Beeri expects this joint venture to come to fruition this summer. The first product to be launched will be on-demand teletherapy for people with chronic stuttering, which affects approximately 1 percent of the global population.

    “We focus for now on chronic conditions,” said Beeri. “About four out of five kids who stutter in childhood no longer stutter by age 14. We focus on the 1 percent that continues from 14 and up, and we also have a pilot at Hadassah for younger children.”

    Amplio 

    Amplio’s AI-powered platform handles all aspects of therapy for special education and child development. (Courtesy of Amplio)

    One of the pioneers in applying artificial intelligence to speech therapy is Amplio (formerly NiNiSpeech), founded by biomedical engineering PhD Yair Shapira, father of a son with a stutter.

    Amplio debuted a mobile health solution in 2015 to help people who stutter maintain fluent speech and to allow speech language pathologists to monitor their success in everyday settings.

    “We started from stuttering and expanded to various speech-language disorders and then to dyslexia and then to entire special populations — a $100 billion annual market in the U.S. In Israel, that includes occupational and physical therapy and psychological counseling,” Shapira said.

    The Haifa-based company, rebranded as AmplioSpeech and then simply Amplio, offers a digital platform serving children and their parents, therapists, educators, clinicians and administrators in the special education market in the U.S. and child-development market in Israel — both onsite and online.

    “Every professional has a digital hub that they use daily, and Amplio is that platform in child development and special education,” said Shapira.

    The platform’s artificial intelligence, natural language processing, personalization algorithms, big data and machine learning technologies help clients maximize outcomes and help professionals track individual performance and manage back-end aspects including resources, scheduling, compliance reports and insurance reimbursement.

    Amplio debuted a mobile health solution in 2015 to help people who stutter. (Amplio screenshot)

    “Mastering skills requires constant stimulation and practice, particularly for struggling learners. Technology is the key to give them more focused, higher-intensity interventions, which is strongly correlated with progress,” Shapira said.

    “This past year has been difficult for all students, and particularly devastating for students with special learning needs,” he said. “Our platform’s blended learning model allows educators to address learning loss at an accelerated pace.”

    Amplio is licensed by hundreds of school districts in 14 U.S. states. Some states, including Texas, use Amplio’s platform to manage all speech, language and dyslexia therapy programs statewide.

    Amplio, which recently announced a $27 million funding round, has about 200 employees in Israel and the U.S., including licensed therapists to fill in staffing gaps for clients.

    The company develops its own products to incorporate on the platform or licenses disorder-specific products, which could theoretically include programs from TikTalk or Novotalk.

    For more information, click here 

    Artificial intelligence ramps up speech therapy success appeared first on ISRAEL21c.



    The post Artificial Intelligence Ramps Up Speech Therapy Success appeared first on Zenger News.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    zenger.news
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Emmett Till National Monument May Be Removed Under Trump Admin

    June 28, 2025

    Black Americans Face Unequal Burden as U.S. Inches Closer to War

    June 22, 2025

    Juneteenth! Freedom Day

    June 19, 2025

    Emmy-winning journalist launches Juneteenth series

    June 19, 2025

    Donald Trump is the first president in 116 years to not be invited to the NAACP convention

    June 16, 2025

    The Department of Education is Collecting Delinquent Student Loan Debt

    April 29, 2025

    Comments are closed.

    Business

    Charlotte Knight Griffin Takes Office as TBA President-Elect

    June 30, 2025

    EXCLUSIVE OP-ED: President Joe Biden Commemorating Juneteenth

    June 19, 2025

    FUNdraising Good Times Report from Neighborhoods USA Conference in Jacksonville

    June 4, 2025
    1 2 3 … 384 Next
    Education
    Education

    Austin Peay’s MPH program receives $27K for childhood literacy initiative. Community LIFT Project to be implemented at Head Start centers this fall

    By Ethan SteinquestJune 30, 2025

    CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. – Austin Peay State University’s Master of Public Health program is on a…

    TSU, State, reach agreement to reallocate $96M to school

    June 26, 2025

    TSU student lands prestigious internship at Harvard Medical School

    June 25, 2025

    FAMU stakeholders file lawsuit to prevent Marva Johnson’s confirmation as the university’s 13th President

    June 21, 2025
    The Tennessee Tribune
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About Us
    • Digital Subscription
    • Store
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact
    © 2025 The Tennessee Tribune - Site Designed by No Regret Media.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Our Spring Sale Has Started

    You can see how this popup was set up in our step-by-step guide: https://wppopupmaker.com/guides/auto-opening-announcement-popups/