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The Quiet Storm
10-15-2002, 09:04 AM
Translating a baby's cries

The mystery of why a baby cries may be solved by a gadget which can tell harassed parents if their child is hungry, sleepy or tired.
The device, which is the size of a calculator, translates the baby's cries, so parents know what's wrong.

A microchip monitors volume, pattern and interval to work out if the baby is stressed, tired, hungry, sleepy or uncomfortable.

Within seconds, a corresponding face lights up to tell parents what is wrong.
The battery-powered "Why Cry" device was created by Spanish electronic engineer Pedro Monagas.

He was trying to work out why his own son Alex was crying.

Help for parents

Mr Monagas spent three years visiting nurseries analysing the crying patterns of babies of around 100 babies.

He told a national newspaper: "My own son Alex was always crying and after night after night of not very much sleep I decided I had to find a way of finding out what he was trying to say to me - if only for my own sanity.

He said his device, which it is claimed has a 98% accuracy rate, could be a real boon to parents.

"It will really help to understand why infants are crying and to react accordingly."

Experience

But paediatrician Dr Harvey Marcovitch, editor of the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood, told BBC News Online the machine would do nothing that experienced mothers could not do already.

"Any mother, certainly an experienced mother, will tell you they are capable of telling the difference between a hunger cry, a cry of pain, or an overtired cry with reasonable accuracy.

"What can a machine offer that a parent can't?"

He said that the machine would also be unable to distinguish colic, where a baby cries and cries for no discernible reason, which does leave parents baffled.

Pedro Monagas has said his device will be available in Spanish pharmacies by the end of the month, priced at 95 euros (£60).


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/2329205.stm

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hmm...

Clementine
10-15-2002, 12:31 PM
ooh weird. i personally wouldn't trust it, but it would be a fun thing to play with....see if it could tell when I'M bored or hungry. that's what we need.....a cry interpretor for women. i'm sure our partners would appreciate it.

i'd be afraid some idiot out there would use this thing dependetly and trust it so much (even when it was WRONG) and try to force feed a crying baby or something.

ej
10-15-2002, 01:05 PM
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I don't think I'd trust the thing as far as I could throw it.
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Rose Bud
10-15-2002, 03:24 PM
reminds me of an episode of The Simpsons for some reason.... ;)

jan
10-15-2002, 07:12 PM
Not for me either.<br>The Japanese have created a similiar device that tells ya want your dog's barks mean...

grumpydawn
10-16-2002, 11:16 AM
That reminds me of a little incident that happened recently.

Hubby and I went out for dinner in a strip mall- next to the restaraunt was an ice cream place. Sitting infront was a man with a new baby in a stroller. You know it was a new baby because of it's cry. That little high pitched squeek. He's sitting there moving the stroller back and forth while the poor thing is wailing. I yelled to him that the baby was hungry and he should feed the baby before his wife came out and got upset for letting the baby cry. My husband was a little embarrassed, but as we were leaving he started reaching into a diaper bag to get a bottle.


Think that device will work for a colicky baby?:t