This video shows that digital home assistants that are The Exotic Time Machine (1998)becoming must-have features in our houses might have an unexpected role in the development of children with language deficits.
SEE ALSO: Google Home trick lets you 'broadcast' messages from your phonePatrick Crispen, an assistant professor of clinical medical education at Keck School of Medicine of USC, Los Angeles, has posted on Reddit a clip which purportedly depicts his 19-month-old son saying his first and only word "Google" when their Google Home replicates animal sounds.
Crispen son is in speech/language therapy because of "significant receptive and expressive language deficits," Crispen says in the Reddit and YouTube description.
"Put simply, he doesn't speak. At all. Zero words," he says.
"We've had a Google Home since last holiday season, and my son absolutely adores its animal sounds. So, you can imagine our pleasure and surprise when my son started doing this this weekend. That's right: My son's first (and currently only) word is 'Google.'"
Crispen tells Mashablethat since his wife bought the home assistant for Christmas last year, the boy showed almost immediate interest and excitement in its ability to play animal noises.
"So that has now become an almost daily game that we play with him. (Us: 'Okay, Google ... what sound does a horse make?' Him: [excited giggling])," he says. "Oddly, Google Home’s nursery rhymes make him cry."
When the boy said his first word, "Google", his parents were both excited and relieved, Crispen recounts.
"Typically, by the time a toddler reaches 18 months of age, he or she has a vocabulary of at least 10 to 15 words," Crispen says. "Our son’s vocabulary was literally zero. Hence the concern."
The video triggered a debate on Reddit, with people being cynical and saying the video is a PR stunt.
Crispen replied saying: "I don't blame you for being cynical. But, as the goofy guy chomping on breadsticks in the back of the video, I can assure you this video and its story are completely true and uncompensated. I just thought people would enjoy the story as much as my wife and I did."
Others called the video dystopian but the boy's dad said the family is "thankful" for the positive steps he's taken.
"I think like any technology, its effectiveness comes from how it is being used and for what purpose," Crispen explains to Mashable.
"If you watch the video, you don’t see a kid plopped down in front of a computer screen mindlessly watching videos. Rather, you’ll see a mother and a son interacting with each other and with Google Home to generate animal sounds."
He's aware that people may find the video quite disturbing, in a Black Mirror-y kind of sense.
"A child’s first word is the name of a giant, multinational corporation? To some, that’s understandably depressing," he says.
"But if you look at what’s happening in the video, what you see is not a child going ‘hail corporate’ but rather a mother and son playing together with technology for fun and hopefully some learning.
"To me, any tool or activity that demonstrably promotes verbal language development in a language-delayed toddler is, by definition, neither dystopian nor disturbing," he added.
Indeed, other Redditors seem to agree with him, and even shared similar stories of their children:
Topics Google Google Home Reddit
Artists use controversial AI report to fight Meta in courtNYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for May 15: Tips to solve Connections #234Best gaming deal: Preorder Elden Ring Nightreign for just $31.99 at NeweggNew TikTok feature uses AI to bring static images to lifeGoogle expands Gemini for Android and caption features for users with disabilitiesGoogle expands Gemini for Android and caption features for users with disabilitiesNASA rover captures an aurora from Mars surface for the first timeBest portable power station deal: Save $700 on EcoFlow Delta 2 Max at AmazonGoogle expands Gemini for Android and caption features for users with disabilitiesNYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for May 14: Tips to solve Connections #233Best Peacock deal: Save over $50 on 12How Android 16 will fight scams for youBest smartwatch deal: Get a Google Pixel Watch 3 for $299.99 at AmazonWhy are we obsessed with body counts again?New TikTok feature uses AI to bring static images to lifeWatch how an old Venus spacecraft tumbled before crashing to EarthGoogle's AI Mode is reportedly hitting the homepageIs TikTok down? [May 2025]Wordle today: The answer and hints for May 15, 2025The internet can't stop thinking of Katy Perry Genres for War: Writers in Ukraine on Literature by Zarina Zabrisky SpaceX reveals cause of September explosion Nobody Writes Like Nancy Lemann by Susan Minot At the Joan Didion Estate Sale by Sophie Haigney Terrance Hayes’s Soundtracks for Most Any Occasion by Terrance Hayes Fairy Tale by Darryl Pinckney Elon Musk acted like an ecstatic child as SpaceX's rocket landed for the 1st time Have a Carrot: Picture Books by The Paris Review Hello, World! Part One: Eliza by Sheila Heti Everything But Money: On Katherine Dunn by Eric Rosenblum Has Henry James Put Me in This Mood? by Donna Dennis Obama trumps Trump and permanently bans Arctic drilling ahead of inauguration Desolation Journal by Jack Kerouac Deep Emotion, Plain Speech: Camus’s The Plague by Laura Marris From Our Summer 1976 Issue: A List of Remarkably Silly Names Dawn Kasper’s Death Scenes by Philippa Snow UK vs. Arkansas basketball livestreams: Game time, streaming deals, and more Staff Picks: Scary Stories by The Paris Review Google Pixel 9 leak reveals 3 big design tweaks. It looks more iPhone The Last Furriers by Ann Manov
2.5672s , 10158.078125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Exotic Time Machine (1998)】,Unobstructed Information Network