New Japanese ‘gun’ can silence speech

randomname

Member
Joined
Jan 3, 2008
Messages
2,712
New Japanese ‘gun’ can silence speech

A new hand-held gun created by Japanese researchers has a startling capability: It can stop a person from speaking mid-sentence.


(NIAIST/Ochanomizu University) The device, developed by Kazutaka Kurihara at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology and Koji Tsukada at Ochanomizu University, can jam the words of speakers more than 100 feet away, Yahoo News reports.

The gun works by using the concept of delayed auditory feedback. A microphone attached to the device picks up the words being said — and then plays it back 0.2 seconds later. The human brain, hearing this echo effect, becomes immediately confused and interprets it as silence. The device has no harmful effects.

The researchers say the tool is intended to be used in quiet spaces, such as libraries, to stop people from speaking. But in a published paper, they also seem to have bigger plans in mind:

We have to establish and obey rules for proper turn-taking when speaking. However, some people tend to lengthen their turns or deliberately interrupt other people when it is their turn in order to establish their presence rather than achieve more fruitful discussions. Furthermore, some people tend to jeer at speakers to invalidate their speech.

“In other words,” writes ExtremeTech.com, “this speech-jamming gun was built to enforce ‘proper’ conversations.”

Yahoo notes that there could be implications for free speech if law enforcement or other agencies began using the device at protests or political rallies.

The speech jammer has no effect, however, on meaningless sound sequences, like “Aaaargghhh.”

In Philadelphia, one man has already found a way to silence talkers -- at least the ones talking into their phones. After being caught using an illegal cellphone jammer by a local NBC news affiliate, the man, who calls himself Eric, said: “A lot of people are extremely loud, no sense of just privacy or anything. When it becomes a bother, that’s when I screw on the antenna and flip the switch.”

h ttp://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/blogpost/post/new-japanese-gun-can-silence-speech/2012/03/02/gIQANKDymR_blog.html
 
I shouldn't joke because it's becoming a reality.

I know how to stop it...

hat.bmp
 
Wait, what? The human brain can't handle a 0.2 second delayed echo? Really? I find that hard to believe actually.

Edit: Could someone with the video editing skillz try to run the audio track of a song or something twice over eachother with a 0.2 second delay to test this. If it somehow made me unable to hear anything my mind would be blown...
 
Last edited:
Man, one of these things could have saved many of my past relationships! I could use a pair of them...
 
Wait, what? The human brain can't handle a 0.2 second delayed echo? Really? I find that hard to believe actually.

Edit: Could someone with the video editing skillz try to run the audio track of a song or something twice over eachother with a 0.2 second delay to test this. If it somehow made me unable to hear anything my mind would be blown...

Have you never spoke into a microphone and have a bad echo effect? Seems it happens all the time on xbox, if you are talking, someone elses mic is picking up your voice and playing it back with a slight delay.

It is very hard to ignore and continue on. I can't imagine the effects if someone could cause me to experience this in my head....as opposed to in my ear.... nuts
 
This is as interesting as it is scary. But goddamn is it interesting.
 
Have you never spoke into a microphone and have a bad echo effect? Seems it happens all the time on xbox, if you are talking, someone elses mic is picking up your voice and playing it back with a slight delay.

It is very hard to ignore and continue on. I can't imagine the effects if someone could cause me to experience this in my head....as opposed to in my ear.... nuts

I get that it's immensly annoying and would make it hard to comprehend anything being said, but the article claims that: "The human brain, hearing this echo effect, becomes immediately confused and interprets it as silence." So you shouldn't be able to hear anything at all, and that's what I'm having a hard time wrapping my brain around...
 
I get that it's immensly annoying and would make it hard to comprehend anything being said, but the article claims that: "The human brain, hearing this echo effect, becomes immediately confused and interprets it as silence." So you shouldn't be able to hear anything at all, and that's what I'm having a hard time wrapping my brain around...

It doesn't make the sound go away, as in all of a sudden no one can hear you, it confuses your mind and makes it difficult to speak.
 
Kinda' lame.

I used to do this for kicks as a kid back in the 1960's. (I used headphones instead of directional
focused speakers and high powered sound output fed by directional mic and digital delay as I'm
guessing this invention uses today).

I'd set up a microphone feeding a 1/4" reel-to-reel tape deck that had "three heads" (Erase, Record,
Play); Placed headphones on the test subject; Asked 'em to read a printed paragraph out loud
(or talk about anything they wanted to).

I'd have them listen to their own voice via headphones (turned up as loud as they could handle
comfortably) while in live "source" mode for a few seconds, then I'd switch to the playback monitor
(delayed sound of their own voice).

Running at 3 3/4 ips tape speed, the delay from that monitor play head was very confusing to listen
to ...for a while, because after a few minutes of practice, it became easy to ignore that delayed sound
and it was possible to push on andjust keep talking normally*.

The effect was a hoot to listen to (and record) because the person talking would pause, then fight the
effect while slowing d-o-w-n / a-n-d / s-lu-r-r-ing words s-p-e-a-k-i-n-g S-L-O-W-L-Y with stops/starts
(sounding quite confused, stumbling, mumbling words as if drunk). I probably have some old
recordings of this effect that seemed quite funny at the time.

It's great. Tyrants are interested in yet another way to inhibit free speech - probably a few million
dollars in (fiat) grant money here!

+++

*Maybe this is why I'm a poor listener now, not hearing the other person talking and interrupting as if
I don't even hear them speaking - just running along with my own thoughts. Hey, this could be added
to mandatory gov skool education to round out all the other imperfections they drill into kids heads!
 
That's what I was thinking.

Isn't this why talk show hosts insist you shut your radio off when calling in, because the tape and transmission delay confuse people when heard together?

Kinda' lame.

I used to do this for kicks as a kid back in the 1960's. (I used headphones instead of directional
focused speakers and high powered sound output fed by directional mic and digital delay as I'm
guessing this invention uses today).

I'd set up a microphone feeding a 1/4" reel-to-reel tape deck that had "three heads" (Erase, Record,
Play); Placed headphones on the test subject; Asked 'em to read a printed paragraph out loud
(or talk about anything they wanted to).

I'd have them listen to their own voice via headphones (turned up as loud as they could handle
comfortably) while in live "source" mode for a few seconds, then I'd switch to the playback monitor
(delayed sound of their own voice).

Running at 3 3/4 ips tape speed, the delay from that monitor play head was very confusing to listen
to ...for a while, because after a few minutes of practice, it became easy to ignore that delayed sound
and it was possible to push on andjust keep talking normally*.

The effect was a hoot to listen to (and record) because the person talking would pause, then fight the
effect while slowing d-o-w-n / a-n-d / s-lu-r-r-ing words s-p-e-a-k-i-n-g S-L-O-W-L-Y with stops/starts
(sounding quite confused, stumbling, mumbling words as if drunk). I probably have some old
recordings of this effect that seemed quite funny at the time.

It's great. Tyrants are interested in yet another way to inhibit free speech - probably a few million
dollars in (fiat) grant money here!

+++

*Maybe this is why I'm a poor listener now, not hearing the other person talking and interrupting as if
I don't even hear them speaking - just running along with my own thoughts. Hey, this could be added
to mandatory gov skool education to round out all the other imperfections they drill into kids heads!
 
I read about technology to prevent groups of people from chanting/cheering at stadium by playing back their chants over the loud speaker on a delay. I can't find it now, but it seems like they took this same concept and just pinpointed it down. (I remember a video at a stadium where a chant started to pick up, then just died and everyone was confused.. but like I said, can't find it now.)

Just another way to quiet protests and messages the government doesn't want to hear.
 
Interesting.

Seems like you could negate it's effect by pointing a silent gun at the silent gun causing a continues loop that would just be interpreted as constant noise.

I had an idea for an invention like this for a hat that could be worn by celebrities where you could wire a hat with flash-slaves and small fast recycling strobes. Every time a paparazzi goes to take a picture the slave would fire off a strobe and mess up the image of the celebrities face. Of course I think I was drunk when I thought it up.
 
Back
Top