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Wikipedia

Braille

Braille (/brl/ BRAYL, French: [bʁɑj]) is a tactile writing system used by people who are visually impaired, including people who are blind, deafblind or who have low vision. It can be read either on embossed paper or by using refreshable braille displays that connect to computers and smartphone devices. Braille can be written using a slate and stylus, a braille writer, an electronic braille notetaker or with the use of a computer connected to a braille embosser.

Braille
Script type (nonlinear)
CreatorLouis Braille
Time period
1824 to present
Directionleft-to-right 
LanguagesSeveral
Related scripts
Parent systems
Child systems
French Braille
English Braille
Bharati Braille
Chinese Braille
Japanese Braille
Korean Braille
Thai Braille
etc.
Sister systems
New York Point
ISO 15924
ISO 15924Brai (570), ​Braille
Unicode
Unicode alias
Braille
U+2800–U+28FF

Braille is named after its creator, Louis Braille, a Frenchman who lost his sight as a result of a childhood accident. In 1824, at the age of fifteen, he developed the braille code based on the French alphabet as an improvement on night writing. He published his system, which subsequently included musical notation, in 1829.[1] The second revision, published in 1837, was the first binary form of writing developed in the modern era.

Braille characters are formed using a combination of six raised dots arranged in a 3 × 2 matrix, called the braille cell. The number and arrangement of these dots distinguishes one character from another. Since the various braille alphabets originated as transcription codes for printed writing, the mappings (sets of character designations) vary from language to language, and even within one; in English Braille there are 3 levels of braille: uncontracted braille – a letter-by-letter transcription used for basic literacy; contracted braille – an addition of abbreviations and contractions used as a space-saving mechanism; and grade 3 – various non-standardized personal stenography that is less commonly used.

In addition to braille text (letters, punctuation, contractions), it is also possible to create embossed illustrations and graphs, with the lines either solid or made of series of dots, arrows, and bullets that are larger than braille dots. A full braille cell includes six raised dots arranged in two columns, each column having three dots.[2] The dot positions are identified by numbers from one to six.[2] There are 64 possible combinations, including no dots at all for a word space.[3] Dot configurations can be used to represent a letter, digit, punctuation mark, or even a word.[2]

Early braille education is crucial to literacy, education and employment among the blind. Despite the evolution of new technologies, including screen reader software that reads information aloud, braille provides blind people with access to spelling, punctuation and other aspects of written language less accessible through audio alone.

While some have suggested that audio-based technologies will decrease the need for braille, technological advancements such as braille displays have continued to make braille more accessible and available. Braille users highlight that braille remains as essential as print is to the sighted.[4]

History

 
The Braille code

where the word premier, French for "first", can be read

Braille was based on a tactile code, now known as night writing, developed by Charles Barbier. (The name "night writing" was later given to it when it was considered as a means for soldiers to communicate silently at night and without a light source, but Barbier's writings do not use this term and suggest that it was originally designed as a simpler form of writing and for the visually impaired.)[5] In Barbier's system, sets of 12 embossed dots were used to encode 36 different sounds. Braille identified three major defects of the code: first, the symbols represented phonetic sounds and not letters of the alphabet – thus the code was unable to render the orthography of the words. Second, the 12-dot symbols could not easily fit beneath the pad of the reading finger. This required the reading finger to move in order to perceive the whole symbol, which slowed the reading process. (This was because Barbier's system was based only on the number of dots in each of two 6-dot columns but not the pattern of the dots.) Third, the code did not include symbols for numerals or punctuation. Braille's solution was to use 6-dot cells and to assign a specific pattern to each letter of the alphabet. Braille also developed symbols for representing numerals and punctuation.[6] At first, Braille was a one-to-one transliteration of the French alphabet, but soon various abbreviations (contractions) and even logograms were developed, creating a system much more like shorthand.[7]

Today, there are braille codes for over 133 languages.[8]

In English, some variations in the braille codes have traditionally existed among English-speaking countries. In 1991, work to standardize the braille codes used in the English-speaking world began. Unified English Braille (UEB) has been adopted in all seven member countries of the International Council on English Braille (ICEB) as well as Nigeria.[9]

For blind readers, Braille is an independent writing system, rather than a code of printed orthography.[10]

Derivation

Braille is derived from the Latin alphabet, albeit indirectly. In Braille's original system, the dot patterns were assigned to letters according to their position within the alphabetic order of the French alphabet of the time, with accented letters and w sorted at the end.[11]

Unlike print, which consists of mostly arbitrary symbols, the braille alphabet follows a logical sequence. The first ten letters of the alphabet, aj, use the upper four dot positions: (black dots in the table below). These stand for the ten digits 19 and 0 in an alphabetic numeral system similar to Greek numerals (as well as derivations of it, including Hebrew numerals, Cyrillic numerals, Abjad numerals, also Hebrew gematria and Greek isopsephy).

Though the dots are assigned in no obvious order, the cells with the fewest dots are assigned to the first three letters (and lowest digits), abc = 123 (), and to the three vowels in this part of the alphabet, aei (), whereas the even digits, 4, 6, 8, 0 (), are corners/right angles.

The next ten letters, kt, are identical to aj respectively, apart from the addition of a dot at position 3 (red dots in the bottom left corner of the cell in the table below): :

Derivation (colored dots) of the 26 braille letters of the basic Latin alphabet from the 10 numeric digits (black dots)
                   
a/1 b/2 c/3 d/4 e/5 f/6 g/7 h/8 i/9 j/0
                   
k l m n o p q r s t
           
u v x y z w

The next ten letters (the next "decade") are the same again, but with dots also at both position 3 and position 6 (green dots in the bottom row of the cell in the table above). Here w was initially left out as not being a part of the official French alphabet at the time of Braille's life; the French braille order is u v x y z ç é à è ù ().[note 1]

The next ten letters, ending in w, are the same again, except that for this series position 6 (purple dot in the bottom right corner of the cell in the table above) is used without a dot at position 3. In French braille these are the letters â ê î ô û ë ï ü œ w (). W had been tacked onto the end of 39 letters of the French alphabet to accommodate English.

The aj series shifted down by one dot space () is used for punctuation. Letters a and c , which only use dots in the top row, were shifted two places for the apostrophe and hyphen: . (These are also the decade diacritics, at left in the table below, of the second and third decade.)

In addition, there are ten patterns that are based on the first two letters () with their dots shifted to the right; these were assigned to non-French letters (ì ä ò ), or serve non-letter functions: (superscript; in English the accent mark), (currency prefix), (capital, in English the decimal point), (number sign), (emphasis mark), (symbol prefix).

The 64 modern braille cells[note 2]
decade numeric sequence shift right
1st                          
2nd                          
3rd                          
4th                          
5th shift
down
                       

The first four decades are similar in respect that in those decades the decade dots are applied to the numeric sequence as a logical "inclusive OR" operation whereas the fifth decade applies a "shift down" operation to the numeric sequence.

Originally there had been nine decades. The fifth through ninth used dashes as well as dots, but proved to be impractical and were soon abandoned. These could be replaced with what we now know as the number sign (), though that only caught on for the digits (old 5th decade → modern 1st decade). The dash occupying the top row of the original sixth decade was simply dropped, producing the modern fifth decade. (See 1829 braille.)

Assignment

Historically, there have been three principles in assigning the values of a linear script (print) to Braille: Using Louis Braille's original French letter values; reassigning the braille letters according to the sort order of the print alphabet being transcribed; and reassigning the letters to improve the efficiency of writing in braille.

Under international consensus, most braille alphabets follow the French sorting order for the 26 letters of the basic Latin alphabet, and there have been attempts at unifying the letters beyond these 26 (see international braille), though differences remain, for example, in German Braille. This unification avoids the chaos of each nation reordering the braille code to match the sorting order of its print alphabet, as happened in Algerian Braille, where braille codes were numerically reassigned to match the order of the Arabic alphabet and bear little relation to the values used in other countries (compare modern Arabic Braille, which uses the French sorting order), and as happened in an early American version of English Braille, where the letters w, x, y, z were reassigned to match English alphabetical order. A convention sometimes seen for letters beyond the basic 26 is to exploit the physical symmetry of braille patterns iconically, for example, by assigning a reversed n to ñ or an inverted s to sh. (See Hungarian Braille and Bharati Braille, which do this to some extent.)

A third principle was to assign braille codes according to frequency, with the simplest patterns (quickest ones to write with a stylus) assigned to the most frequent letters of the alphabet. Such frequency-based alphabets were used in Germany and the United States in the 19th century (see American Braille), but with the invention of the braille typewriter their advantage disappeared, and none are attested in modern use – they had the disadvantage that the resulting small number of dots in a text interfered with following the alignment of the letters, and consequently made texts more difficult to read than Braille's more arbitrary letter assignment. Finally, there are braille scripts that do not order the codes numerically at all, such as Japanese Braille and Korean Braille, which are based on more abstract principles of syllable composition.

Texts are sometimes written in a script of eight dots per cell rather than six, enabling them to encode a greater number of symbols. (See Gardner–Salinas braille codes.) Luxembourgish Braille has adopted eight-dot cells for general use; for example, it adds a dot below each letter to derive its capital variant.

Form

 
Silver wedding bands with names Henri(que) and Tita written in braille

Braille was the first writing system with binary encoding.[7] The system as devised by Braille consists of two parts:[10]

  1. Character encoding that mapped characters of the French alphabet to tuples of six bits (the dots).
  2. The physical representation of those six-bit characters with raised dots in a braille cell.

Within an individual cell, the dot positions are arranged in two columns of three positions. A raised dot can appear in any of the six positions, producing 64 (26) possible patterns, including one in which there are no raised dots. For reference purposes, a pattern is commonly described by listing the positions where dots are raised, the positions being universally numbered, from top to bottom, as 1 to 3 on the left and 4 to 6 on the right. For example, dot pattern 1-3-4 describes a cell with three dots raised, at the top and bottom in the left column and at the top of the right column: that is, the letter m. The lines of horizontal braille text are separated by a space, much like visible printed text, so that the dots of one line can be differentiated from the braille text above and below. Different assignments of braille codes (or code pages) are used to map the character sets of different printed scripts to the six-bit cells. Braille assignments have also been created for mathematical and musical notation. However, because the six-dot braille cell allows only 64 (26) patterns, including space, the characters of a braille script commonly have multiple values, depending on their context. That is, character mapping between print and braille is not one-to-one. For example, the character corresponds in print to both the letter d and the digit 4.

In addition to simple encoding, many braille alphabets use contractions to reduce the size of braille texts and to increase reading speed. (See Contracted braille.)

Writing braille

 
Lucy Sergent, 26-year-old daughter of a Kentucky coal miner, writing with a slate and stylus in 1946. Blind from birth, she attended the Kentucky School for the Blind for 11 years.
 
Braille typewriter

Braille may be produced by hand using a slate and stylus in which each dot is created from the back of the page, writing in mirror image, or it may be produced on a braille typewriter or Perkins Brailler, or an electronic Brailler or braille notetaker. Braille users with access to smartphones may also activate the on-screen braille input keyboard, to type braille symbols on to their device by placing their fingers on to the screen according to the dot configuration of the symbols they wish to form. These symbols are automatically translated into print on the screen. The different tools that exist for writing braille allow the braille user to select the method that is best for a given task. For example, the slate and stylus is a portable writing tool, much like the pen and paper for the sighted. Errors can be erased using a braille eraser or can be overwritten with all six dots (). Interpoint refers to braille printing that is offset, so that the paper can be embossed on both sides, with the dots on one side appearing between the divots that form the dots on the other. Using a computer or other electronic device, Braille may be produced with a braille embosser (printer) or a refreshable braille display (screen).

Eight-dot braille

Braille has been extended to an 8-dot code, particularly for use with braille embossers and refreshable braille displays. In 8-dot braille the additional dots are added at the bottom of the cell, giving a matrix 4 dots high by 2 dots wide. The additional dots are given the numbers 7 (for the lower-left dot) and 8 (for the lower-right dot). Eight-dot braille has the advantages that the case of an individual letter is directly coded in the cell containing the letter and that all the printable ASCII characters can be represented in a single cell. All 256 (28) possible combinations of 8 dots are encoded by the Unicode standard. Braille with six dots is frequently stored as Braille ASCII.

Letters

The first 25 braille letters, up through the first half of the 3rd decade, transcribe a–z (skipping w). In English Braille, the rest of that decade is rounded out with the ligatures and, for, of, the, and with. Omitting dot 3 from these forms the 4th decade, the ligatures ch, gh, sh, th, wh, ed, er, ou, ow and the letter w.

     
ch sh th

(See English Braille.)

Formatting

Various formatting marks affect the values of the letters that follow them. They have no direct equivalent in print. The most important in English Braille are:

   
Capital
follows
Number
follows

That is, is read as capital 'A', and as the digit '1'.

Punctuation

Basic punctuation marks in English Braille include:

           
Comma Semicolon Apostrophe Colon Hyphen Decimal point
           
Full stop
(period)
Exclamation
point
Open quote,
question mark
Close
quote
Bracket
(parentheses)
Slash
(fraction)

is both the question mark and the opening quotation mark. Its reading depends on whether it occurs before a word or after.

is used for both opening and closing parentheses. Its placement relative to spaces and other characters determines its interpretation.

Punctuation varies from language to language. For example, French Braille uses for its question mark and swaps the quotation marks and parentheses (to and ); it uses the period () for the decimal point, as in print, and the decimal point () to mark capitalization.

Contractions

Braille contractions are words and affixes that are shortened so that they take up fewer cells. In English Braille, for example, the word afternoon is written with just three letters, ⟨afn⟩, much like stenoscript. There are also several abbreviation marks that create what are effectively logograms.[10] The most common of these is dot 5, which combines with the first letter of words. With the letter m, the resulting word is mother. There are also ligatures ("contracted" letters), which are single letters in braille but correspond to more than one letter in print. The letter and, for example, is used to write words with the sequence a-n-d in them, such as hand.

         
afternoon
(a-f-n)
mother
(dot 5–m)
hand
(h-and)

Page dimensions

Most braille embossers support between 34 and 40 cells per line, and 25 lines per page.

A manually operated Perkins braille typewriter supports a maximum of 42 cells per line (its margins are adjustable), and typical paper allows 25 lines per page.

A large interlining Stainsby has 36 cells per line and 18 lines per page.

An A4-sized Marburg braille frame, which allows interpoint braille (dots on both sides of the page, offset so they do not interfere with each other), has 30 cells per line and 27 lines per page.

Braille writing machine

Braille typewriter
 
Stainsby Braille writer

A Braille writing machine is a typewriter with six keys that allows the user to write braille on a regular hard copy page.

The first Braille typewriter to gain general acceptance was invented by Frank Haven Hall (Superintendent of the Illinois School for the Blind), and was presented to the public in 1892.[12][13]

The Stainsby Brailler, developed by Henry Stainsby in 1903, is a mechanical writer with a sliding carriage that moves over an aluminium plate as it embosses Braille characters. An improved version was introduced around 1933.[14][15]

In 1951 David Abraham, a woodworking teacher at the Perkins School for the Blind produced a more advanced Braille typewriter, the Perkins Brailler.[12]

Braille printers or embosser were produced in the 1950s. In 1960 Robert Mann, a teacher in MIT, wrote DOTSYS, a software that allowed automatic braille translation, and another group created an embossing device called "M.I.T. Braillemboss". The Mitre Corporation team of Robert Gildea, Jonathan Millen, Reid Gerhart and Joseph Sullivan (now president of Duxbury Systems) developed DOTSYS III, the first braille translator written in a portable programming language. DOTSYS III was developed for the Atlanta Public Schools as a public domain program.[16][17]

In 1991 Ernest Bate developed the Mountbatten Brailler, an electronic machine used to type braille on braille paper, giving it a number of additional features such as word processing, audio feedback and embossing. This version was improved in 2008 with a quiet writer that had an erase key.[18]

In 2011 David S. Morgan produced the first SMART Brailler machine, with added text to speech function and allowed digital capture of data entered.[19]

Braille reading

Braille is traditionally read in hardcopy form, such as with paper books written in braille, documents produced in paper braille (such as restaurant menus), and braille labels or public signage. It can also be read on a refreshable braille display either as a stand-alone electronic device or connected to a computer or smartphone. Refreshable braille displays convert what is visually shown on a computer or smartphone screen into braille through a series of pins that rise and fall to form braille symbols. Currently more than 1% of all printed books have been translated into hardcopy braille.[20]

The fastest braille readers apply a light touch and read braille with two hands, although reading braille with one hand is also possible.[21] Although the finger can read only one braille character at a time, the brain chunks braille at a higher level, processing words a digraph, root or suffix at a time. The processing largely takes place in the visual cortex.[22]

Literacy

 
Georgia Academy for the Blind has been providing braille education and braille literacy since 1876.

Children who are blind miss out on fundamental parts of early and advanced education if not provided with the necessary tools, such as access to educational materials in braille. Children who are blind or visually impaired can begin learning foundational braille skills from a very young age to become fluent braille readers as they get older. Sighted children are naturally exposed to written language on signs, on TV and in the books they see. Blind children require the same early exposure to literacy, through access to braille rich environments and opportunities to explore the world around them. Print-braille books, for example, present text in both print and braille and can be read by sighted parents to blind children (and vice versa), allowing blind children to develop an early love for reading even before formal reading instruction begins.[23]

Adults who experience sight loss later in life or who did not have the opportunity to learn it when they were younger can also learn braille. In most cases, adults who learn braille were already literate in print before vision loss and so instruction focuses more on developing the tactile and motor skills needed to read braille.[24]

While different countries publish statistics on how many readers in a given organization request braille, these numbers only provide a partial picture of braille literacy statistics. For example, this data does not survey the entire population of braille readers or always include readers who are no longer in the school system (adults) or readers who request electronic braille materials. Therefore, there are currently no reliable statistics on braille literacy rates, as described in a publication in the Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness.[25] Regardless of the precise percentage of braille readers, there is consensus that braille should be provided to all those who benefit from it.[26]

Numerous factors influence access to braille literacy, including school budget constraints, technology advancements such as screen-reader software, access to qualified instruction, and different philosophical views over how blind children should be educated.[27][28]

In the USA, a key turning point for braille literacy was the passage of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, an act of Congress that moved thousands of children from specialized schools for the blind into mainstream public schools.[29] Because only a small percentage of public schools could afford to train and hire braille-qualified teachers, braille literacy has declined since the law took effect.[clarification needed][29] Braille literacy rates have improved slightly since the bill was passed,[clarification needed] in part because of pressure from consumers and advocacy groups that has led 27 states to pass legislation mandating that children who are legally blind be given the opportunity to learn braille.[27]

In 1998 there were 57,425 legally blind students registered in the United States, but only 10% (5,461) of them used braille as their primary reading medium.[30][31]

Early Braille education is crucial to literacy for a blind or low-vision child. A study conducted in the state of Washington found that people who learned braille at an early age did just as well, if not better than their sighted peers in several areas, including vocabulary and comprehension. In the preliminary adult study, while evaluating the correlation between adult literacy skills and employment, it was found that 44% of the participants who had learned to read in braille were unemployed, compared to the 77% unemployment rate of those who had learned to read using print.[32] Currently, among the estimated 85,000 blind adults in the United States, 90% of those who are braille-literate are employed. Among adults who do not know braille, only 33% are employed.[29] Statistically, history has proven that braille reading proficiency provides an essential skill set that allows blind or low-vision children to compete with their sighted peers in a school environment and later in life as they enter the workforce.[27]

Regardless of the specific percentage of braille readers, proponents point out the importance of increasing access to braille for all those who can benefit from it.[33]

Braille transcription

 
Braille on a box of tablets. The raised Braille reads "plavix".
 
Braille book and the same book in inkprint

Although it is possible to transcribe print by simply substituting the equivalent braille character for its printed equivalent, in English such a character-by-character transcription (known as uncontracted braille) is typically used by beginners or those who only engage in short reading tasks (such as reading household labels).

Braille characters are much larger than their printed equivalents, and the standard 11" by 11.5" (28 cm × 30 cm) page has room for only 25 lines of 43 characters. To reduce space and increase reading speed, most braille alphabets and orthographies use ligatures, abbreviations, and contractions. Virtually all English braille books in hardcopy (paper) format are transcribed in contracted braille: The Library of Congress's Instruction Manual for Braille Transcribing[34] runs to over 300 pages, and braille transcribers must pass certification tests.

Uncontracted braille was previously known as grade 1 braille, and contracted braille was previously known as grade 2 braille. Uncontracted braille is a direct transliteration of print words (one-to-one correspondence); hence, the word "about" would contain all the same letters in uncontracted braille as it does in inkprint. Contracted braille includes short forms to save space; hence, for example, the letters "ab" when standing alone represent the word "about" in English contracted braille. In English, some braille users only learn uncontracted braille, particularly if braille is being used for shorter reading tasks such as reading household labels. However, those who plan to use braille for educational and employment purposes and longer reading texts often go on to contracted braille.

The system of contractions in English Braille begins with a set of 23 words contracted to single characters. Thus the word but is contracted to the single letter b, can to c, do to d, and so on. Even this simple rule creates issues requiring special cases; for example, d is, specifically, an abbreviation of the verb do; the noun do representing the note of the musical scale is a different word and must be spelled out.

Portions of words may be contracted, and many rules govern this process. For example, the character with dots 2-3-5 (the letter "f" lowered in the Braille cell) stands for "ff" when used in the middle of a word. At the beginning of a word, this same character stands for the word "to"; the character is written in braille with no space following it. (This contraction was removed in the Unified English Braille Code.) At the end of a word, the same character represents an exclamation point.

Some contractions are more similar than their print equivalents. For example, the contraction ⟨lr⟩, meaning "letter", differs from ⟨ll⟩, meaning "little", only by one dot in the second letter: little, letter. This causes greater confusion between the braille spellings of these words and can hinder the learning process of contracted braille.[35]

The contraction rules take into account the linguistic structure of the word; thus, contractions are generally not to be used when their use would alter the usual braille form of a base word to which a prefix or suffix has been added. Some portions of the transcription rules are not fully codified and rely on the judgment of the transcriber. Thus, when the contraction rules permit the same word in more than one way, preference is given to "the contraction that more nearly approximates correct pronunciation".

"Grade 3 braille" is a variety of non-standardized systems that include many additional shorthand-like contractions.[36] They are not used for publication, but by individuals for their personal convenience.

Braille translation software

When people produce braille, this is called braille transcription. When computer software produces braille, this is called a braille translator. Braille translation software exists to handle almost all of the common languages of the world, and many technical areas, such as mathematics (mathematical notation), for example WIMATS, music (musical notation), and tactile graphics.

Braille reading techniques

Since Braille is one of the few writing systems where tactile perception is used, as opposed to visual perception, a braille reader must develop new skills. One skill important for Braille readers is the ability to create smooth and even pressures when running one's fingers along the words. There are many different styles and techniques used for the understanding and development of braille, even though a study by B. F. Holland[37] suggests that there is no specific technique that is superior to any other.

Another study by Lowenfield & Abel[38] shows that braille can be read "the fastest and best... by students who read using the index fingers of both hands". Another important reading skill emphasized in this study is to finish reading the end of a line with the right hand and to find the beginning of the next line with the left hand simultaneously.

International uniformity

 
Braille plate at Duftrosengarten in Rapperswil, Switzerland

When Braille was first adapted to languages other than French, many schemes were adopted, including mapping the native alphabet to the alphabetical order of French – e.g. in English W, which was not in the French alphabet at the time, is mapped to braille X, X to Y, Y to Z, and Z to the first French-accented letter – or completely rearranging the alphabet such that common letters are represented by the simplest braille patterns. Consequently, mutual intelligibility was greatly hindered by this state of affairs. In 1878, the International Congress on Work for the Blind, held in Paris, proposed an international braille standard, where braille codes for different languages and scripts would be based, not on the order of a particular alphabet, but on phonetic correspondence and transliteration to Latin.[39]

This unified braille has been applied to the languages of India and Africa, Arabic, Vietnamese, Hebrew, Russian, and Armenian, as well as nearly all Latin-script languages. In Greek, for example, γ (g) is written as Latin g, despite the fact that it has the alphabetic position of c; Hebrew ב (b), the second letter of the alphabet and cognate with the Latin letter b, is sometimes pronounced /b/ and sometimes /v/, and is written b or v accordingly; Russian ц (ts) is written as c, which is the usual letter for /ts/ in those Slavic languages that use the Latin alphabet; and Arabic ف (f) is written as f, despite being historically p and occurring in that part of the Arabic alphabet (between historic o and q).

Other braille conventions

Other systems for assigning values to braille patterns are also followed beside the simple mapping of the alphabetical order onto the original French order. Some braille alphabets start with unified braille, and then diverge significantly based on the phonology of the target languages, while others diverge even further.

In the various Chinese systems, traditional braille values are used for initial consonants and the simple vowels. In both Mandarin and Cantonese Braille, however, characters have different readings depending on whether they are placed in syllable-initial (onset) or syllable-final (rime) position. For instance, the cell for Latin k, , represents Cantonese k (g in Yale and other modern romanizations) when initial, but aak when final, while Latin j, , represents Cantonese initial j but final oei.

Novel systems of braille mapping include Korean, which adopts separate syllable-initial and syllable-final forms for its consonants, explicitly grouping braille cells into syllabic groups in the same way as hangul. Japanese, meanwhile, combines independent vowel dot patterns and modifier consonant dot patterns into a single braille cell – an abugida representation of each Japanese mora.

Uses

 
A bottle of Chapoutier wine, with braille on the label
 
An embossed map of a German train station, with braille text

Braille is read by people who are blind, deafblind or who have low vision, and by both those born with a visual impairment and those who experience sight loss later in life. Even individuals with low vision will find that they benefit from braille, depending on level of vision or context (for example, when lighting or colour contrast is poor). Braille is used for both short and long reading tasks. Examples of short reading tasks include braille labels for identifying household items (or cards in a wallet), reading elevator buttons, accessing phone numbers, recipes, grocery lists and other personal notes. Examples of longer reading tasks include using braille to access educational materials, novels and magazines. People with access to a refreshable braille display can also use braille for reading email and ebooks, browsing the internet and accessing other electronic documents. It is also possible to adapt or purchase playing cards and board games in braille.[40]

In India there are instances where the parliament acts have been published in braille, such as The Right to Information Act.[41] Sylheti Braille is used in Northeast India.[42]

In Canada, passenger safety information in braille and tactile seat row markers are required aboard planes, trains, large ferries, and interprovincial busses pursuant to the Canadian Transportation Agency's regulations.[43]

In the United States, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 requires various building signage to be in braille.[44]

In the United Kingdom, it is required that medicines have the name of the medicine in Braille on the labeling.[45]

Currency

The current series of Canadian banknotes has a tactile feature consisting of raised dots that indicate the denomination, allowing bills to be easily identified by blind or low vision people. It does not use standard braille numbers to identify the value. Instead, the number of full braille cells, which can be simply counted by both braille readers and non-braille readers alike, is an indicator of the value of the bill.

Mexican bank notes, Australian bank notes, Indian rupee notes, Israeli new shekel notes[46] and Russian ruble notes also have special raised symbols to make them identifiable by persons who are blind or have low vision.[47]

Euro coins were designed in cooperation with organisations representing blind people, and as a result they incorporate many features allowing them to be distinguished by touch alone. In addition, their visual appearance is designed to make them easy to tell apart for persons who cannot read the inscriptions on the coins. "A good design for the blind and partially sighted is a good design for everybody" was the principle behind the cooperation of the European Central Bank and the European Blind Union during the design phase of the first series Euro banknotes in the 1990s.[48] As a result, the design of the first euro banknotes included several characteristics which aid both the blind and partially sighted to confidently use the notes.[48]

Australia introduced the tactile feature onto their five-dollar banknote in 2016[49]

In the United Kingdom, the front of the £10 polymer note (the side with raised print), has two clusters of raised dots in the top left hand corner, and the £20 note has three. This tactile feature helps blind and partially sighted people identify the value of the note.[50]

In 2003 the US Mint introduced the commemorative Alabama State Quarter, which recognized State Daughter Helen Keller on the Obverse, including the name Helen Keller in both English script and Braille inscription. This appears to be the first known use of Braille on US Coin Currency, though not standard on all coins of this type.[51]

Unicode

The Braille set was added to the Unicode Standard in version 3.0 (1999).

Most braille embossers and refreshable braille displays do not use the Unicode code points, but instead reuse the 8-bit code points that are assigned to standard ASCII for braille ASCII. (Thus, for simple material, the same bitstream may be interpreted equally as visual letter forms for sighted readers or their exact semantic equivalent in tactile patterns for blind readers. However some codes have quite different tactile versus visual interpretations and most are not even defined in Braille ASCII.)

Some embossers have proprietary control codes for 8-dot braille or for full graphics mode, where dots may be placed anywhere on the page without leaving any space between braille cells so that continuous lines can be drawn in diagrams, but these are rarely used and are not standard.

The Unicode standard encodes 6-dot and 8-dot braille glyphs according to their binary appearance, rather than following their assigned numeric order. Dot 1 corresponds to the least significant bit of the low byte of the Unicode scalar value, and dot 8 to the high bit of that byte.

The Unicode block for braille is U+2800 ... U+28FF. The mapping of patterns to characters etc. is language dependent: even for English for example, see American Braille and English Braille.

Braille Patterns[1]
Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF)
  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
U+280x
U+281x
U+282x
U+283x
(end of 6-dot cell patterns)
U+284x
U+285x
U+286x
U+287x
U+288x
U+289x
U+28Ax
U+28Bx
U+28Cx
U+28Dx
U+28Ex
U+28Fx
Notes
1.^ As of Unicode version 15.0

Observation

Every year on 4 January, World Braille Day is observed internationally to commemorate the birth of Louis Braille and to recognize his efforts. Although the event is not considered a public holiday, it has been recognized by the United Nations as an official day of celebration since 2019.[52]

Braille devices

There is a variety of contemporary electronic devices that serve the needs of blind people that operate in Braille, such as refreshable braille displays and Braille e-book that use different technologies for transmitting graphic information of different types (pictures, maps, graphs, texts, etc.).

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The values of the Latin letters after z differ from language to language; these are Braille's assignments for rendering French.
  2. ^
     
    The final form of Braille's alphabet, according to Henri (1952). "(1)" indicates markers for musical and mathematical notation.

    The characters have been arranged by decade, with decade diacritics listed at left, and supplementary characters included on the right according to their diacritic. See 1829 braille, where the 12 characters listed in the first line are used for shorthand and are found in this order for the 12 notes of plainsong notation, and French Braille, where the "final" form of Braille's alphabet is laid out in the same way. However, modern tables often organize the supplementary characters differently: those with a dot 3 are listed as a 6th group of 6 characters, and those with dots only on the right side are listed as a 7th group of 7, without anything in common with the other characters in the columns they are listed under.

References

  1. ^ Braille, Louis (1829). Method of Writing Words, Music, and Plain Songs by Means of Dots, for Use by the Blind and Arranged for Them.
  2. ^ a b c "The Dot Positions in the braille cell Are Identified by Numbers from One Through Six". AFB.org. from the original on 8 March 2019. Retrieved 19 June 2016.
  3. ^ "Louis Braille and the Braille System". duxburysystems.com. from the original on 16 August 2018. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  4. ^ World Blind Union. "Press Release: The importance of Braille Literacy". The International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness. from the original on 1 December 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  5. ^ "Braille". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Archived from the original on 9 November 2019. Retrieved 20 April 2022.
  6. ^ Roy, Noëlle, (PDF), Valentin Haüy Association, archived from the original (PDF) on 10 October 2010, retrieved 5 February 2011
  7. ^ a b Daniels, Peter T.; Bright, William (1996). "Analog and Digital Writing". The World's Writing Systems. p. 886. ISBN 978-0-19-507993-7.
  8. ^ Perkins; International Council on English Braille; National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, Library of Congress; UNESCO (2013), World Braille Usage (3rd ed.), Perkins, from the original on 30 November 2021, retrieved 30 November 2021
  9. ^ "Unified English Braille". International Council on English Braille. from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  10. ^ a b c Daniels, Peter T.; Bright, William (1996). The World's Writing Systems. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 817–818. ISBN 978-0-19-507993-7.
  11. ^ Loomis, Madeleine Seymour (1942). The Braille Reference Book for Grades I, I.5, and II. New York and London: Harper & Bros. OCLC 13839990.
  12. ^ a b (PDF). 17 November 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 October 2012.
  13. ^ "Hall Braille-writer 1; Harrison & Seifried, Chicago, 1892 – serial no.25". antiquetypewriters.com. from the original on 19 November 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  14. ^ Edman, Polly (1992). Tactile Graphics. American Foundation for the Blind. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-89128-194-8. Retrieved 23 October 2019. Stainsby brailler
  15. ^ "Object – Stainsby Braille writer – Victorian Collections". Victorian Collections. Museums Australia Victoria. from the original on 23 October 2019. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
  16. ^ Braille Translation System for the IBM 704 by Ann S. Schack and R.T. Mertz, 1961 22 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 30 March 2016
  17. ^ Schack, Ann; And others (June 1969). "Computer Translation: Grade 2 from Print; Report of American Printing House of the Blind" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 25 February 2021. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
  18. ^ "Perkins/APH Next Generation Brailler". APH Museum. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  19. ^ "Perkins SMART Brailler". Dexigner. 17 July 2012. from the original on 28 September 2020. Retrieved 15 April 2020.
  20. ^ "Braille Book Review May–June 2021". National Library Service for the Blind and Print Disabled (NLS) | Library of Congress. from the original on 12 February 2022. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  21. ^ Dixon, Judy. "Supercharge Your Braille Reading for Pleasure and Productivity". AFB AccessWorld. American Foundation for the Blind. from the original on 1 December 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  22. ^ Experts Gathering In Houston To Discuss How Braille Is Taught – And What It Can Teach Us. 3 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine National Public Radio, 5 May 2018
  23. ^ Reed-Brown, Cindy; Palmer, Peggy. "Pre-Braille". Paths to Literacy. Perkins School for the Blind/Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired. from the original on 30 November 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  24. ^ "All About Braille". VisionAware. American Printing House for the Blind. from the original on 1 December 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  25. ^ Sheffield, Rebecca; D'Andrea, Frances M.; Morash, Valerie; Chatfield, Sarah (2022). "How Many Braille Readers? Policy, Politics, and Perception". Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness. 116: 14–25. doi:10.1177/0145482X211071125. S2CID 247049239. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  26. ^ "June 4, 2021 Workshop: Braille Literacy Canada Symposium: From Braille Literacy to Empowerment". from the original on 13 December 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
  27. ^ a b c Riles, Ruby, , Braille Research Center, archived from the original on 28 May 2009, retrieved 15 April 2009
  28. ^ Wiazowski, Jaroslaw (2014). "Can Braille Be Revived? A Possible Impact of High-End Braille and Mainstream Technology on the Revival of Tactile Literacy Medium". Assistive Technology. 26 (4): 227–30. doi:10.1080/10400435.2014.928389. PMID 25771608. S2CID 27260036 – via Taylor & Francis Online.
  29. ^ a b c Ranalli, Ralph (5 January 2008), "A Boost for Braille", The Boston Globe, from the original on 3 March 2016, retrieved 17 April 2009
  30. ^ American Printing House for the Blind (APH) (1999), , archived from the original on 31 January 2002, retrieved 27 October 2016
  31. ^ Ebnet, Matthew (30 June 2001), "Braille Challenge Gives Young Blind Students a Chance to Shine", Los Angeles Times, from the original on 15 July 2012, retrieved 15 April 2009
  32. ^ Riles, Ruby (2004), "Research Study: Early Braille Education Vital", Future Reflections, from the original on 29 August 2008, retrieved 15 April 2009
  33. ^ About Braille - The Need for Braille. NBP.
  34. ^ Risjord, Constance (2009). Instruction Manual for Braille Transcribing ( 17 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine), Library of Congress, 5th ed. ISBN 0-8444-1227-9.
  35. ^ Hampshire, Barry (1981). Working with Braille. Paris: Unesco.
  36. ^ "What is Braille". Brailleworks. from the original on 1 December 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  37. ^ Holland, B. F. (1934). "Speed and Pressure Factors in Braille Reading", Teachers Forum, Vol. 7. pp. 13–17.
  38. ^ Lowenfield, B.; Abel, G. L. (1977). Methods of Teaching Braille Reading Efficiency of Children in Lower Senior Classes. Birmingham, Research Centre for the Education of the Visually Handicapped.
  39. ^ "International Meeting on Braille Uniformity" (PDF). UNESCO. (PDF) from the original on 1 November 2013. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
  40. ^ "Home | Recreation and Leisure for People Who Are Blind or Visually Impaired | Playing Cards and Games After Vision Loss | Board Games". visionaware.org. from the original on 1 December 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  41. ^ . The Hindu. 4 July 2006. Archived from the original on 8 July 2006. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  42. ^ "Sylheti". www.duxburysystems.com. from the original on 8 June 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  43. ^ "Accessible Transportation for Persons with Disabilities Regulations". Canadian Transportation Agency. 23 June 2020. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  44. ^ "Appendix A to Part 36 – Standards for Accessible Design: ADA ACCESSIBILITY GUIDELINES FOR BUILDINGS AND FACILITIES". from the original on 21 April 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021. 4.30.4* Raised and Brailled Characters and Pictorial Symbol Signs (Pictograms). Letters and numerals shall be raised 1/32 in, upper case, sans serif or simple serif type and shall be accompanied with Grade 2 Braille.
  45. ^ "Medicines: packaging, labeling, and patient information leaflets". gov.uk. from the original on 6 January 2022. Retrieved 5 May 2015.
  46. ^ Bank of Israel – Banknote Security Features – Raised print (intaglio) 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine. boi.org.il. Retrieved 11 January 2013.
  47. ^ "Banknotes | Банк России". www.cbr.ru. Central Bank of Russia. from the original on 9 December 2018. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  48. ^ a b "ECB: For the visually impaired". European Central Bank. 2002. from the original on 7 January 2012. Retrieved 10 January 2012.
  49. ^ Mills, Nicole (30 August 2016). "Australia's new $5 notes to be more accessible to blind and vision-impaired people". ABC News. from the original on 21 October 2016. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
  50. ^ "Questions about polymer banknotes and the new £10 note". Bank of England. 1 December 2021. from the original on 1 December 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  51. ^ "Alabama State Quarter | U.S. Mint". United States Mint.
  52. ^ "World Braille Day: 4th January". www.un.org. Retrieved 2 January 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

External links

  • L'association Valentin Haüy (in French)
    • Acting for the autonomy of blind and partially sighted persons (Corporate brochure) (Microsoft Word file, in English)
  • Alternate Text Production Center of the California Community Colleges.
  • Braille Part 1 Text To Speech For The Visually Impaired YouTube
  • Braille information and advice – Sense UK
  • Braille at Omniglot

braille, this, article, about, writing, system, used, people, blind, have, vision, person, created, braille, louis, other, uses, disambiguation, examples, perspective, this, article, deal, primarily, with, english, speaking, world, represent, worldwide, view, . This article is about the writing system used by people who are blind or have low vision For the person who created braille see Louis Braille For other uses see Braille disambiguation The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the English speaking world and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Braille b r eɪ l BRAYL French bʁɑj is a tactile writing system used by people who are visually impaired including people who are blind deafblind or who have low vision It can be read either on embossed paper or by using refreshable braille displays that connect to computers and smartphone devices Braille can be written using a slate and stylus a braille writer an electronic braille notetaker or with the use of a computer connected to a braille embosser BrailleScript typeAlphabet nonlinear CreatorLouis BrailleTime period1824 to presentDirectionleft to right LanguagesSeveralRelated scriptsParent systemsNight writingEarly brailleBrailleChild systemsFrench BrailleEnglish BrailleBharati BrailleChinese BrailleJapanese BrailleKorean BrailleThai Brailleetc Sister systemsNew York PointISO 15924ISO 15924Brai 570 BrailleUnicodeUnicode aliasBrailleUnicode rangeU 2800 U 28FFThis article contains Unicode Braille characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Braille characters Braille is named after its creator Louis Braille a Frenchman who lost his sight as a result of a childhood accident In 1824 at the age of fifteen he developed the braille code based on the French alphabet as an improvement on night writing He published his system which subsequently included musical notation in 1829 1 The second revision published in 1837 was the first binary form of writing developed in the modern era Braille characters are formed using a combination of six raised dots arranged in a 3 2 matrix called the braille cell The number and arrangement of these dots distinguishes one character from another Since the various braille alphabets originated as transcription codes for printed writing the mappings sets of character designations vary from language to language and even within one in English Braille there are 3 levels of braille uncontracted braille a letter by letter transcription used for basic literacy contracted braille an addition of abbreviations and contractions used as a space saving mechanism and grade 3 various non standardized personal stenography that is less commonly used In addition to braille text letters punctuation contractions it is also possible to create embossed illustrations and graphs with the lines either solid or made of series of dots arrows and bullets that are larger than braille dots A full braille cell includes six raised dots arranged in two columns each column having three dots 2 The dot positions are identified by numbers from one to six 2 There are 64 possible combinations including no dots at all for a word space 3 Dot configurations can be used to represent a letter digit punctuation mark or even a word 2 Early braille education is crucial to literacy education and employment among the blind Despite the evolution of new technologies including screen reader software that reads information aloud braille provides blind people with access to spelling punctuation and other aspects of written language less accessible through audio alone While some have suggested that audio based technologies will decrease the need for braille technological advancements such as braille displays have continued to make braille more accessible and available Braille users highlight that braille remains as essential as print is to the sighted 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Derivation 1 2 Assignment 2 Form 3 Writing braille 3 1 Eight dot braille 3 2 Letters 3 3 Formatting 3 4 Punctuation 3 5 Contractions 3 6 Page dimensions 3 7 Braille writing machine 4 Braille reading 5 Literacy 6 Braille transcription 7 Braille translation software 8 Braille reading techniques 9 International uniformity 10 Other braille conventions 11 Uses 11 1 Currency 12 Unicode 13 Observation 14 Braille devices 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 18 External linksHistory Edit The Braille code where the word premier French for first can be read Braille was based on a tactile code now known as night writing developed by Charles Barbier The name night writing was later given to it when it was considered as a means for soldiers to communicate silently at night and without a light source but Barbier s writings do not use this term and suggest that it was originally designed as a simpler form of writing and for the visually impaired 5 In Barbier s system sets of 12 embossed dots were used to encode 36 different sounds Braille identified three major defects of the code first the symbols represented phonetic sounds and not letters of the alphabet thus the code was unable to render the orthography of the words Second the 12 dot symbols could not easily fit beneath the pad of the reading finger This required the reading finger to move in order to perceive the whole symbol which slowed the reading process This was because Barbier s system was based only on the number of dots in each of two 6 dot columns but not the pattern of the dots Third the code did not include symbols for numerals or punctuation Braille s solution was to use 6 dot cells and to assign a specific pattern to each letter of the alphabet Braille also developed symbols for representing numerals and punctuation 6 At first Braille was a one to one transliteration of the French alphabet but soon various abbreviations contractions and even logograms were developed creating a system much more like shorthand 7 Today there are braille codes for over 133 languages 8 In English some variations in the braille codes have traditionally existed among English speaking countries In 1991 work to standardize the braille codes used in the English speaking world began Unified English Braille UEB has been adopted in all seven member countries of the International Council on English Braille ICEB as well as Nigeria 9 For blind readers Braille is an independent writing system rather than a code of printed orthography 10 Derivation Edit Braille is derived from the Latin alphabet albeit indirectly In Braille s original system the dot patterns were assigned to letters according to their position within the alphabetic order of the French alphabet of the time with accented letters and w sorted at the end 11 Unlike print which consists of mostly arbitrary symbols the braille alphabet follows a logical sequence The first ten letters of the alphabet a j use the upper four dot positions black dots in the table below These stand for the ten digits 1 9 and 0 in an alphabetic numeral system similar to Greek numerals as well as derivations of it including Hebrew numerals Cyrillic numerals Abjad numerals also Hebrew gematria and Greek isopsephy Though the dots are assigned in no obvious order the cells with the fewest dots are assigned to the first three letters and lowest digits abc 123 and to the three vowels in this part of the alphabet aei whereas the even digits 4 6 8 0 are corners right angles The next ten letters k t are identical to a j respectively apart from the addition of a dot at position 3 red dots in the bottom left corner of the cell in the table below Derivation colored dots of the 26 braille letters of the basic Latin alphabet from the 10 numeric digits black dots a 1 b 2 c 3 d 4 e 5 f 6 g 7 h 8 i 9 j 0 k l m n o p q r s t u v x y z wThe next ten letters the next decade are the same again but with dots also at both position 3 and position 6 green dots in the bottom row of the cell in the table above Here w was initially left out as not being a part of the official French alphabet at the time of Braille s life the French braille order is u v x y z c e a e u note 1 The next ten letters ending in w are the same again except that for this series position 6 purple dot in the bottom right corner of the cell in the table above is used without a dot at position 3 In French braille these are the letters a e i o u e i u œ w W had been tacked onto the end of 39 letters of the French alphabet to accommodate English The a j series shifted down by one dot space is used for punctuation Letters a and c which only use dots in the top row were shifted two places for the apostrophe and hyphen These are also the decade diacritics at left in the table below of the second and third decade In addition there are ten patterns that are based on the first two letters with their dots shifted to the right these were assigned to non French letters i a o or serve non letter functions superscript in English the accent mark currency prefix capital in English the decimal point number sign emphasis mark symbol prefix The 64 modern braille cells note 2 decade numeric sequence shift right1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th shiftdown The first four decades are similar in respect that in those decades the decade dots are applied to the numeric sequence as a logical inclusive OR operation whereas the fifth decade applies a shift down operation to the numeric sequence Originally there had been nine decades The fifth through ninth used dashes as well as dots but proved to be impractical and were soon abandoned These could be replaced with what we now know as the number sign though that only caught on for the digits old 5th decade modern 1st decade The dash occupying the top row of the original sixth decade was simply dropped producing the modern fifth decade See 1829 braille Assignment Edit Historically there have been three principles in assigning the values of a linear script print to Braille Using Louis Braille s original French letter values reassigning the braille letters according to the sort order of the print alphabet being transcribed and reassigning the letters to improve the efficiency of writing in braille Under international consensus most braille alphabets follow the French sorting order for the 26 letters of the basic Latin alphabet and there have been attempts at unifying the letters beyond these 26 see international braille though differences remain for example in German Braille This unification avoids the chaos of each nation reordering the braille code to match the sorting order of its print alphabet as happened in Algerian Braille where braille codes were numerically reassigned to match the order of the Arabic alphabet and bear little relation to the values used in other countries compare modern Arabic Braille which uses the French sorting order and as happened in an early American version of English Braille where the letters w x y z were reassigned to match English alphabetical order A convention sometimes seen for letters beyond the basic 26 is to exploit the physical symmetry of braille patterns iconically for example by assigning a reversed n to n or an inverted s to sh See Hungarian Braille and Bharati Braille which do this to some extent A third principle was to assign braille codes according to frequency with the simplest patterns quickest ones to write with a stylus assigned to the most frequent letters of the alphabet Such frequency based alphabets were used in Germany and the United States in the 19th century see American Braille but with the invention of the braille typewriter their advantage disappeared and none are attested in modern use they had the disadvantage that the resulting small number of dots in a text interfered with following the alignment of the letters and consequently made texts more difficult to read than Braille s more arbitrary letter assignment Finally there are braille scripts that do not order the codes numerically at all such as Japanese Braille and Korean Braille which are based on more abstract principles of syllable composition Texts are sometimes written in a script of eight dots per cell rather than six enabling them to encode a greater number of symbols See Gardner Salinas braille codes Luxembourgish Braille has adopted eight dot cells for general use for example it adds a dot below each letter to derive its capital variant Form Edit Silver wedding bands with names Henri que and Tita written in braille Braille was the first writing system with binary encoding 7 The system as devised by Braille consists of two parts 10 Character encoding that mapped characters of the French alphabet to tuples of six bits the dots The physical representation of those six bit characters with raised dots in a braille cell Within an individual cell the dot positions are arranged in two columns of three positions A raised dot can appear in any of the six positions producing 64 26 possible patterns including one in which there are no raised dots For reference purposes a pattern is commonly described by listing the positions where dots are raised the positions being universally numbered from top to bottom as 1 to 3 on the left and 4 to 6 on the right For example dot pattern 1 3 4 describes a cell with three dots raised at the top and bottom in the left column and at the top of the right column that is the letter m The lines of horizontal braille text are separated by a space much like visible printed text so that the dots of one line can be differentiated from the braille text above and below Different assignments of braille codes or code pages are used to map the character sets of different printed scripts to the six bit cells Braille assignments have also been created for mathematical and musical notation However because the six dot braille cell allows only 64 26 patterns including space the characters of a braille script commonly have multiple values depending on their context That is character mapping between print and braille is not one to one For example the character corresponds in print to both the letter d and the digit 4 In addition to simple encoding many braille alphabets use contractions to reduce the size of braille texts and to increase reading speed See Contracted braille Writing braille Edit Lucy Sergent 26 year old daughter of a Kentucky coal miner writing with a slate and stylus in 1946 Blind from birth she attended the Kentucky School for the Blind for 11 years Braille typewriter Braille may be produced by hand using a slate and stylus in which each dot is created from the back of the page writing in mirror image or it may be produced on a braille typewriter or Perkins Brailler or an electronic Brailler or braille notetaker Braille users with access to smartphones may also activate the on screen braille input keyboard to type braille symbols on to their device by placing their fingers on to the screen according to the dot configuration of the symbols they wish to form These symbols are automatically translated into print on the screen The different tools that exist for writing braille allow the braille user to select the method that is best for a given task For example the slate and stylus is a portable writing tool much like the pen and paper for the sighted Errors can be erased using a braille eraser or can be overwritten with all six dots Interpoint refers to braille printing that is offset so that the paper can be embossed on both sides with the dots on one side appearing between the divots that form the dots on the other Using a computer or other electronic device Braille may be produced with a braille embosser printer or a refreshable braille display screen Eight dot braille Edit Braille has been extended to an 8 dot code particularly for use with braille embossers and refreshable braille displays In 8 dot braille the additional dots are added at the bottom of the cell giving a matrix 4 dots high by 2 dots wide The additional dots are given the numbers 7 for the lower left dot and 8 for the lower right dot Eight dot braille has the advantages that the case of an individual letter is directly coded in the cell containing the letter and that all the printable ASCII characters can be represented in a single cell All 256 28 possible combinations of 8 dots are encoded by the Unicode standard Braille with six dots is frequently stored as Braille ASCII Letters Edit The first 25 braille letters up through the first half of the 3rd decade transcribe a z skipping w In English Braille the rest of that decade is rounded out with the ligatures and for of the and with Omitting dot 3 from these forms the 4th decade the ligatures ch gh sh th wh ed er ou ow and the letter w ch sh th See English Braille Formatting Edit Various formatting marks affect the values of the letters that follow them They have no direct equivalent in print The most important in English Braille are Capitalfollows NumberfollowsThat is is read as capital A and as the digit 1 Punctuation Edit Basic punctuation marks in English Braille include Comma Semicolon Apostrophe Colon Hyphen Decimal point Full stop period Exclamation point Open quote question mark Close quote Bracket parentheses Slash fraction is both the question mark and the opening quotation mark Its reading depends on whether it occurs before a word or after is used for both opening and closing parentheses Its placement relative to spaces and other characters determines its interpretation Punctuation varies from language to language For example French Braille uses for its question mark and swaps the quotation marks and parentheses to and it uses the period for the decimal point as in print and the decimal point to mark capitalization Contractions Edit For a full list of abbreviations and contractions in English see English Braille Contractions Braille contractions are words and affixes that are shortened so that they take up fewer cells In English Braille for example the word afternoon is written with just three letters afn much like stenoscript There are also several abbreviation marks that create what are effectively logograms 10 The most common of these is dot 5 which combines with the first letter of words With the letter m the resulting word is mother There are also ligatures contracted letters which are single letters in braille but correspond to more than one letter in print The letter and for example is used to write words with the sequence a n d in them such as hand afternoon a f n mother dot 5 m hand h and Page dimensions Edit Most braille embossers support between 34 and 40 cells per line and 25 lines per page A manually operated Perkins braille typewriter supports a maximum of 42 cells per line its margins are adjustable and typical paper allows 25 lines per page A large interlining Stainsby has 36 cells per line and 18 lines per page An A4 sized Marburg braille frame which allows interpoint braille dots on both sides of the page offset so they do not interfere with each other has 30 cells per line and 27 lines per page Braille writing machine Edit source source source source source source source source source source Braille typewriter Stainsby Braille writer A Braille writing machine is a typewriter with six keys that allows the user to write braille on a regular hard copy page The first Braille typewriter to gain general acceptance was invented by Frank Haven Hall Superintendent of the Illinois School for the Blind and was presented to the public in 1892 12 13 The Stainsby Brailler developed by Henry Stainsby in 1903 is a mechanical writer with a sliding carriage that moves over an aluminium plate as it embosses Braille characters An improved version was introduced around 1933 14 15 In 1951 David Abraham a woodworking teacher at the Perkins School for the Blind produced a more advanced Braille typewriter the Perkins Brailler 12 Braille printers or embosser were produced in the 1950s In 1960 Robert Mann a teacher in MIT wrote DOTSYS a software that allowed automatic braille translation and another group created an embossing device called M I T Braillemboss The Mitre Corporation team of Robert Gildea Jonathan Millen Reid Gerhart and Joseph Sullivan now president of Duxbury Systems developed DOTSYS III the first braille translator written in a portable programming language DOTSYS III was developed for the Atlanta Public Schools as a public domain program 16 17 In 1991 Ernest Bate developed the Mountbatten Brailler an electronic machine used to type braille on braille paper giving it a number of additional features such as word processing audio feedback and embossing This version was improved in 2008 with a quiet writer that had an erase key 18 In 2011 David S Morgan produced the first SMART Brailler machine with added text to speech function and allowed digital capture of data entered 19 Braille reading EditBraille is traditionally read in hardcopy form such as with paper books written in braille documents produced in paper braille such as restaurant menus and braille labels or public signage It can also be read on a refreshable braille display either as a stand alone electronic device or connected to a computer or smartphone Refreshable braille displays convert what is visually shown on a computer or smartphone screen into braille through a series of pins that rise and fall to form braille symbols Currently more than 1 of all printed books have been translated into hardcopy braille 20 The fastest braille readers apply a light touch and read braille with two hands although reading braille with one hand is also possible 21 Although the finger can read only one braille character at a time the brain chunks braille at a higher level processing words a digraph root or suffix at a time The processing largely takes place in the visual cortex 22 Literacy EditMain article Braille literacy Georgia Academy for the Blind has been providing braille education and braille literacy since 1876 Children who are blind miss out on fundamental parts of early and advanced education if not provided with the necessary tools such as access to educational materials in braille Children who are blind or visually impaired can begin learning foundational braille skills from a very young age to become fluent braille readers as they get older Sighted children are naturally exposed to written language on signs on TV and in the books they see Blind children require the same early exposure to literacy through access to braille rich environments and opportunities to explore the world around them Print braille books for example present text in both print and braille and can be read by sighted parents to blind children and vice versa allowing blind children to develop an early love for reading even before formal reading instruction begins 23 Adults who experience sight loss later in life or who did not have the opportunity to learn it when they were younger can also learn braille In most cases adults who learn braille were already literate in print before vision loss and so instruction focuses more on developing the tactile and motor skills needed to read braille 24 While different countries publish statistics on how many readers in a given organization request braille these numbers only provide a partial picture of braille literacy statistics For example this data does not survey the entire population of braille readers or always include readers who are no longer in the school system adults or readers who request electronic braille materials Therefore there are currently no reliable statistics on braille literacy rates as described in a publication in the Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness 25 Regardless of the precise percentage of braille readers there is consensus that braille should be provided to all those who benefit from it 26 Numerous factors influence access to braille literacy including school budget constraints technology advancements such as screen reader software access to qualified instruction and different philosophical views over how blind children should be educated 27 28 In the USA a key turning point for braille literacy was the passage of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 an act of Congress that moved thousands of children from specialized schools for the blind into mainstream public schools 29 Because only a small percentage of public schools could afford to train and hire braille qualified teachers braille literacy has declined since the law took effect clarification needed 29 Braille literacy rates have improved slightly since the bill was passed clarification needed in part because of pressure from consumers and advocacy groups that has led 27 states to pass legislation mandating that children who are legally blind be given the opportunity to learn braille 27 In 1998 there were 57 425 legally blind students registered in the United States but only 10 5 461 of them used braille as their primary reading medium 30 31 Early Braille education is crucial to literacy for a blind or low vision child A study conducted in the state of Washington found that people who learned braille at an early age did just as well if not better than their sighted peers in several areas including vocabulary and comprehension In the preliminary adult study while evaluating the correlation between adult literacy skills and employment it was found that 44 of the participants who had learned to read in braille were unemployed compared to the 77 unemployment rate of those who had learned to read using print 32 Currently among the estimated 85 000 blind adults in the United States 90 of those who are braille literate are employed Among adults who do not know braille only 33 are employed 29 Statistically history has proven that braille reading proficiency provides an essential skill set that allows blind or low vision children to compete with their sighted peers in a school environment and later in life as they enter the workforce 27 Regardless of the specific percentage of braille readers proponents point out the importance of increasing access to braille for all those who can benefit from it 33 Braille transcription Edit Braille on a box of tablets The raised Braille reads plavix Braille book and the same book in inkprint Although it is possible to transcribe print by simply substituting the equivalent braille character for its printed equivalent in English such a character by character transcription known as uncontracted braille is typically used by beginners or those who only engage in short reading tasks such as reading household labels Braille characters are much larger than their printed equivalents and the standard 11 by 11 5 28 cm 30 cm page has room for only 25 lines of 43 characters To reduce space and increase reading speed most braille alphabets and orthographies use ligatures abbreviations and contractions Virtually all English braille books in hardcopy paper format are transcribed in contracted braille The Library of Congress s Instruction Manual for Braille Transcribing 34 runs to over 300 pages and braille transcribers must pass certification tests Uncontracted braille was previously known as grade 1 braille and contracted braille was previously known as grade 2 braille Uncontracted braille is a direct transliteration of print words one to one correspondence hence the word about would contain all the same letters in uncontracted braille as it does in inkprint Contracted braille includes short forms to save space hence for example the letters ab when standing alone represent the word about in English contracted braille In English some braille users only learn uncontracted braille particularly if braille is being used for shorter reading tasks such as reading household labels However those who plan to use braille for educational and employment purposes and longer reading texts often go on to contracted braille The system of contractions in English Braille begins with a set of 23 words contracted to single characters Thus the word but is contracted to the single letter b can to c do to d and so on Even this simple rule creates issues requiring special cases for example d is specifically an abbreviation of the verb do the noun do representing the note of the musical scale is a different word and must be spelled out Portions of words may be contracted and many rules govern this process For example the character with dots 2 3 5 the letter f lowered in the Braille cell stands for ff when used in the middle of a word At the beginning of a word this same character stands for the word to the character is written in braille with no space following it This contraction was removed in the Unified English Braille Code At the end of a word the same character represents an exclamation point Some contractions are more similar than their print equivalents For example the contraction lr meaning letter differs from ll meaning little only by one dot in the second letter little letter This causes greater confusion between the braille spellings of these words and can hinder the learning process of contracted braille 35 The contraction rules take into account the linguistic structure of the word thus contractions are generally not to be used when their use would alter the usual braille form of a base word to which a prefix or suffix has been added Some portions of the transcription rules are not fully codified and rely on the judgment of the transcriber Thus when the contraction rules permit the same word in more than one way preference is given to the contraction that more nearly approximates correct pronunciation Grade 3 braille is a variety of non standardized systems that include many additional shorthand like contractions 36 They are not used for publication but by individuals for their personal convenience Braille translation software EditWhen people produce braille this is called braille transcription When computer software produces braille this is called a braille translator Braille translation software exists to handle almost all of the common languages of the world and many technical areas such as mathematics mathematical notation for example WIMATS music musical notation and tactile graphics Braille reading techniques EditSince Braille is one of the few writing systems where tactile perception is used as opposed to visual perception a braille reader must develop new skills One skill important for Braille readers is the ability to create smooth and even pressures when running one s fingers along the words There are many different styles and techniques used for the understanding and development of braille even though a study by B F Holland 37 suggests that there is no specific technique that is superior to any other Another study by Lowenfield amp Abel 38 shows that braille can be read the fastest and best by students who read using the index fingers of both hands Another important reading skill emphasized in this study is to finish reading the end of a line with the right hand and to find the beginning of the next line with the left hand simultaneously International uniformity EditMain article International uniformity of braille Braille plate at Duftrosengarten in Rapperswil Switzerland When Braille was first adapted to languages other than French many schemes were adopted including mapping the native alphabet to the alphabetical order of French e g in English W which was not in the French alphabet at the time is mapped to braille X X to Y Y to Z and Z to the first French accented letter or completely rearranging the alphabet such that common letters are represented by the simplest braille patterns Consequently mutual intelligibility was greatly hindered by this state of affairs In 1878 the International Congress on Work for the Blind held in Paris proposed an international braille standard where braille codes for different languages and scripts would be based not on the order of a particular alphabet but on phonetic correspondence and transliteration to Latin 39 This unified braille has been applied to the languages of India and Africa Arabic Vietnamese Hebrew Russian and Armenian as well as nearly all Latin script languages In Greek for example g g is written as Latin g despite the fact that it has the alphabetic position of c Hebrew ב b the second letter of the alphabet and cognate with the Latin letter b is sometimes pronounced b and sometimes v and is written b or v accordingly Russian c ts is written as c which is the usual letter for ts in those Slavic languages that use the Latin alphabet and Arabic ف f is written as f despite being historically p and occurring in that part of the Arabic alphabet between historic o and q Other braille conventions EditOther systems for assigning values to braille patterns are also followed beside the simple mapping of the alphabetical order onto the original French order Some braille alphabets start with unified braille and then diverge significantly based on the phonology of the target languages while others diverge even further In the various Chinese systems traditional braille values are used for initial consonants and the simple vowels In both Mandarin and Cantonese Braille however characters have different readings depending on whether they are placed in syllable initial onset or syllable final rime position For instance the cell for Latin k represents Cantonese k g in Yale and other modern romanizations when initial but aak when final while Latin j represents Cantonese initial j but final oei Novel systems of braille mapping include Korean which adopts separate syllable initial and syllable final forms for its consonants explicitly grouping braille cells into syllabic groups in the same way as hangul Japanese meanwhile combines independent vowel dot patterns and modifier consonant dot patterns into a single braille cell an abugida representation of each Japanese mora Uses Edit A bottle of Chapoutier wine with braille on the label An embossed map of a German train station with braille text Braille is read by people who are blind deafblind or who have low vision and by both those born with a visual impairment and those who experience sight loss later in life Even individuals with low vision will find that they benefit from braille depending on level of vision or context for example when lighting or colour contrast is poor Braille is used for both short and long reading tasks Examples of short reading tasks include braille labels for identifying household items or cards in a wallet reading elevator buttons accessing phone numbers recipes grocery lists and other personal notes Examples of longer reading tasks include using braille to access educational materials novels and magazines People with access to a refreshable braille display can also use braille for reading email and ebooks browsing the internet and accessing other electronic documents It is also possible to adapt or purchase playing cards and board games in braille 40 In India there are instances where the parliament acts have been published in braille such as The Right to Information Act 41 Sylheti Braille is used in Northeast India 42 In Canada passenger safety information in braille and tactile seat row markers are required aboard planes trains large ferries and interprovincial busses pursuant to the Canadian Transportation Agency s regulations 43 In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 requires various building signage to be in braille 44 In the United Kingdom it is required that medicines have the name of the medicine in Braille on the labeling 45 Currency Edit The current series of Canadian banknotes has a tactile feature consisting of raised dots that indicate the denomination allowing bills to be easily identified by blind or low vision people It does not use standard braille numbers to identify the value Instead the number of full braille cells which can be simply counted by both braille readers and non braille readers alike is an indicator of the value of the bill Mexican bank notes Australian bank notes Indian rupee notes Israeli new shekel notes 46 and Russian ruble notes also have special raised symbols to make them identifiable by persons who are blind or have low vision 47 Euro coins were designed in cooperation with organisations representing blind people and as a result they incorporate many features allowing them to be distinguished by touch alone In addition their visual appearance is designed to make them easy to tell apart for persons who cannot read the inscriptions on the coins A good design for the blind and partially sighted is a good design for everybody was the principle behind the cooperation of the European Central Bank and the European Blind Union during the design phase of the first series Euro banknotes in the 1990s 48 As a result the design of the first euro banknotes included several characteristics which aid both the blind and partially sighted to confidently use the notes 48 Australia introduced the tactile feature onto their five dollar banknote in 2016 49 In the United Kingdom the front of the 10 polymer note the side with raised print has two clusters of raised dots in the top left hand corner and the 20 note has three This tactile feature helps blind and partially sighted people identify the value of the note 50 In 2003 the US Mint introduced the commemorative Alabama State Quarter which recognized State Daughter Helen Keller on the Obverse including the name Helen Keller in both English script and Braille inscription This appears to be the first known use of Braille on US Coin Currency though not standard on all coins of this type 51 Unicode EditMain article Unicode braille patterns The Braille set was added to the Unicode Standard in version 3 0 1999 Most braille embossers and refreshable braille displays do not use the Unicode code points but instead reuse the 8 bit code points that are assigned to standard ASCII for braille ASCII Thus for simple material the same bitstream may be interpreted equally as visual letter forms for sighted readers or their exact semantic equivalent in tactile patterns for blind readers However some codes have quite different tactile versus visual interpretations and most are not even defined in Braille ASCII Some embossers have proprietary control codes for 8 dot braille or for full graphics mode where dots may be placed anywhere on the page without leaving any space between braille cells so that continuous lines can be drawn in diagrams but these are rarely used and are not standard The Unicode standard encodes 6 dot and 8 dot braille glyphs according to their binary appearance rather than following their assigned numeric order Dot 1 corresponds to the least significant bit of the low byte of the Unicode scalar value and dot 8 to the high bit of that byte The Unicode block for braille is U 2800 U 28FF The mapping of patterns to characters etc is language dependent even for English for example see American Braille and English Braille Braille Patterns 1 Official Unicode Consortium code chart PDF 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E FU 280x U 281x U 282x U 283x end of 6 dot cell patterns U 284x U 285x U 286x U 287x U 288x U 289x U 28Ax U 28Bx U 28Cx U 28Dx U 28Ex U 28Fx Notes 1 As of Unicode version 15 0Observation EditEvery year on 4 January World Braille Day is observed internationally to commemorate the birth of Louis Braille and to recognize his efforts Although the event is not considered a public holiday it has been recognized by the United Nations as an official day of celebration since 2019 52 Braille devices EditThere is a variety of contemporary electronic devices that serve the needs of blind people that operate in Braille such as refreshable braille displays and Braille e book that use different technologies for transmitting graphic information of different types pictures maps graphs texts etc See also EditAccessible Books Consortium Accessible publishing Approach to publishing and book design Braille literacy Ability to read using Braille Braille music Braille form of musical notation Braille technology Type of assistive technology Braille translator Software program used to translate text into braille script Braille watch Watch for people with visual impairment English Braille Tactile writing system for English Moon type Writing system for the blind Needle punch Making a small hole in a thin material Nemeth Braille Braille code for mathematics and science Refreshable Braille display Device for displaying braille charactersPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Tactile alphabet Alphabet readable by touch Tactile graphic Image that can be read by touch Tangible symbol systems Pictures or objects used as symbols Unified English Braille Braille standard for the English language Swagat Thorat Indian wildlife photographer playwright painter editor and director the Braille man of India List of binary codes List of international common standards Nyctography Simple substitution cipherNotes Edit The values of the Latin letters after z differ from language to language these are Braille s assignments for rendering French The final form of Braille s alphabet according to Henri 1952 1 indicates markers for musical and mathematical notation The characters have been arranged by decade with decade diacritics listed at left and supplementary characters included on the right according to their diacritic See 1829 braille where the 12 characters listed in the first line are used for shorthand and are found in this order for the 12 notes of plainsong notation and French Braille where the final form of Braille s alphabet is laid out in the same way However modern tables often organize the supplementary characters differently those with a dot 3 are listed as a 6th group of 6 characters and those with dots only on the right side are listed as a 7th group of 7 without anything in common with the other characters in the columns they are listed under References Edit Braille Louis 1829 Method of Writing Words Music and Plain Songs by Means of Dots for Use by the Blind and Arranged for Them a b c The Dot Positions in the braille cell Are Identified by Numbers from One Through Six AFB org Archived from the original on 8 March 2019 Retrieved 19 June 2016 Louis Braille and the Braille System duxburysystems com Archived from the original on 16 August 2018 Retrieved 16 August 2018 World Blind Union Press Release The importance of Braille Literacy The International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness Archived from the original on 1 December 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2021 Braille Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 9 November 2019 Retrieved 20 April 2022 Roy Noelle Louis Braille 1809 1852 a French genius PDF Valentin Hauy Association archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2010 retrieved 5 February 2011 a b Daniels Peter T Bright William 1996 Analog and Digital Writing The World s Writing Systems p 886 ISBN 978 0 19 507993 7 Perkins International Council on English Braille National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped Library of Congress UNESCO 2013 World Braille Usage 3rd ed Perkins archived from the original on 30 November 2021 retrieved 30 November 2021 Unified English Braille International Council on English Braille Archived from the original on 11 April 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2021 a b c Daniels Peter T Bright William 1996 The World s Writing Systems Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 817 818 ISBN 978 0 19 507993 7 Loomis Madeleine Seymour 1942 The Braille Reference Book for Grades I I 5 and II New York and London Harper amp Bros OCLC 13839990 a b History of the Perkins Brailler PDF 17 November 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 28 October 2012 Hall Braille writer 1 Harrison amp Seifried Chicago 1892 serial no 25 antiquetypewriters com Archived from the original on 19 November 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2021 Edman Polly 1992 Tactile Graphics American Foundation for the Blind p 154 ISBN 978 0 89128 194 8 Retrieved 23 October 2019 Stainsby brailler Object Stainsby Braille writer Victorian Collections Victorian Collections Museums Australia Victoria Archived from the original on 23 October 2019 Retrieved 23 October 2019 Braille Translation System for the IBM 704 by Ann S Schack and R T Mertz 1961 Archived 22 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 30 March 2016 Schack Ann And others June 1969 Computer Translation Grade 2 from Print Report of American Printing House of the Blind PDF Archived PDF from the original on 25 February 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2016 Perkins APH Next Generation Brailler APH Museum Retrieved 26 October 2022 Perkins SMART Brailler Dexigner 17 July 2012 Archived from the original on 28 September 2020 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Braille Book Review May June 2021 National Library Service for the Blind and Print Disabled NLS Library of Congress Archived from the original on 12 February 2022 Retrieved 12 February 2022 Dixon Judy Supercharge Your Braille Reading for Pleasure and Productivity AFB AccessWorld American Foundation for the Blind Archived from the original on 1 December 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2021 Experts Gathering In Houston To Discuss How Braille Is Taught And What It Can Teach Us Archived 3 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine National Public Radio 5 May 2018 Reed Brown Cindy Palmer Peggy Pre Braille Paths to Literacy Perkins School for the Blind Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired Archived from the original on 30 November 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2021 All About Braille VisionAware American Printing House for the Blind Archived from the original on 1 December 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2021 Sheffield Rebecca D Andrea Frances M Morash Valerie Chatfield Sarah 2022 How Many Braille Readers Policy Politics and Perception Journal of Visual Impairment amp Blindness 116 14 25 doi 10 1177 0145482X211071125 S2CID 247049239 Retrieved 11 April 2022 June 4 2021 Workshop Braille Literacy Canada Symposium From Braille Literacy to Empowerment Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2021 a b c Riles Ruby The Impact of Braille Reading Skills on Employment Income Education and Reading Habits Braille Research Center archived from the original on 28 May 2009 retrieved 15 April 2009 Wiazowski Jaroslaw 2014 Can Braille Be Revived A Possible Impact of High End Braille and Mainstream Technology on the Revival of Tactile Literacy Medium Assistive Technology 26 4 227 30 doi 10 1080 10400435 2014 928389 PMID 25771608 S2CID 27260036 via Taylor amp Francis Online a b c Ranalli Ralph 5 January 2008 A Boost for Braille The Boston Globe archived from the original on 3 March 2016 retrieved 17 April 2009 American Printing House for the Blind APH 1999 APH maintains an annual register of legally blind students below the college level archived from the original on 31 January 2002 retrieved 27 October 2016 Ebnet Matthew 30 June 2001 Braille Challenge Gives Young Blind Students a Chance to Shine Los Angeles Times archived from the original on 15 July 2012 retrieved 15 April 2009 Riles Ruby 2004 Research Study Early Braille Education Vital Future Reflections archived from the original on 29 August 2008 retrieved 15 April 2009 About Braille The Need for Braille NBP Risjord Constance 2009 Instruction Manual for Braille Transcribing Archived 17 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine Library of Congress 5th ed ISBN 0 8444 1227 9 Hampshire Barry 1981 Working with Braille Paris Unesco What is Braille Brailleworks Archived from the original on 1 December 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2021 Holland B F 1934 Speed and Pressure Factors in Braille Reading Teachers Forum Vol 7 pp 13 17 Lowenfield B Abel G L 1977 Methods of Teaching Braille Reading Efficiency of Children in Lower Senior Classes Birmingham Research Centre for the Education of the Visually Handicapped International Meeting on Braille Uniformity PDF UNESCO Archived PDF from the original on 1 November 2013 Retrieved 24 April 2012 Home Recreation and Leisure for People Who Are Blind or Visually Impaired Playing Cards and Games After Vision Loss Board Games visionaware org Archived from the original on 1 December 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2021 National Right to Information Act in Braille The Hindu 4 July 2006 Archived from the original on 8 July 2006 Retrieved 21 December 2012 Sylheti www duxburysystems com Archived from the original on 8 June 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 Accessible Transportation for Persons with Disabilities Regulations Canadian Transportation Agency 23 June 2020 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2021 Appendix A to Part 36 Standards for Accessible Design ADA ACCESSIBILITY GUIDELINES FOR BUILDINGS AND FACILITIES Archived from the original on 21 April 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2021 4 30 4 Raised and Brailled Characters and Pictorial Symbol Signs Pictograms Letters and numerals shall be raised 1 32 in upper case sans serif or simple serif type and shall be accompanied with Grade 2 Braille Medicines packaging labeling and patient information leaflets gov uk Archived from the original on 6 January 2022 Retrieved 5 May 2015 Bank of Israel Banknote Security Features Raised print intaglio Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine boi org il Retrieved 11 January 2013 Banknotes Bank Rossii www cbr ru Central Bank of Russia Archived from the original on 9 December 2018 Retrieved 9 December 2018 a b ECB For the visually impaired European Central Bank 2002 Archived from the original on 7 January 2012 Retrieved 10 January 2012 Mills Nicole 30 August 2016 Australia s new 5 notes to be more accessible to blind and vision impaired people ABC News Archived from the original on 21 October 2016 Retrieved 21 October 2016 Questions about polymer banknotes and the new 10 note Bank of England 1 December 2021 Archived from the original on 1 December 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2021 Alabama State Quarter U S Mint United States Mint World Braille Day 4th January www un org Retrieved 2 January 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Braille L association Valentin Hauy in French Acting for the autonomy of blind and partially sighted persons Corporate brochure Microsoft Word file in English Alternate Text Production Center of the California Community Colleges Braille Part 1 Text To Speech For The Visually Impaired YouTube Braille information and advice Sense UK Braille at Omniglot Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Braille amp oldid 1150197436, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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