WASHINGTON ā AT&T and Gallaudet University have developed a football helmet for players who are deaf or hard of hearing and communicate using American Sign Language.
The company and Washington-based school for students who are deaf or hard of hearing unveiled the new technology Thursday.
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It allows a coach to call a play on a tablet from the sideline that then shows up visually on a small display screen inside the quarterbackās helmet. Gallaudet, which competes in Division III, was cleared by the NCAA to use the helmet in its game on Saturday at home against Hilbert.
Gallaudet coach Chuck Goldstein said he thinks the helmet āwill change football.ā
āWe work out the same way as every other college football program, we practice the same way, we compete the same way," Goldstein said. āThe difference between coaching a hearing team compared to a Deaf team is first the communication.ā
The final product is the result of almost two years of communication between the team and AT&T, which came up with the concept as a way to close the inclusion gap for the Deaf community with its 5G network.
āWe came up with ideas on how to make this helmet more effective (and) weād interact with (players and coaches)," said Corey Anthony, AT&T senior VP of networking engineering and operations. "They would give us feedback. Weād go back, make changes, work on it. Itās just a beautiful relationship that we have with that university.ā
Anthony said the company also leaned on employees who are deaf or hard of hearing during the process.
āThis is probably one of the more sort of exciting and enriching projects that weāve worked on in a very long time,ā he said.
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AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football