What Is Braille
What Is Braille
Image showing the Braille Alphabet and Numerals - Created and owned by Braille Works
Braille is a system of touch reading and writing for blind persons in which raised dots
represent the letters of the alphabet. Braille also contains equivalents for punctuation
marks and provides symbols to show letter groupings.
Braille is read by moving the hand or hands from left to right along each line. Both hands
are usually involved in the reading process, and reading is generally done with the index
fingers. The average reading speed is about 125 words per minute, but greater speeds of
up to 200 words per minute are possible.
By using the braille alphabet, people who are blind can review and study the written
word. They can also become aware of different written conventions such as spelling,
punctuation, paragraphing and footnotes.
Most of all, braille gives blind individuals access to a wide range of reading materials
including recreational and educational reading, financial statements and restaurant menus.
Equally important are contracts, regulations, insurance policies, directories and
cookbooks that are all part of daily adult life. Through braille, people who are blind can
also pursue hobbies and cultural enrichment with materials such as music scores,
hymnals, playing cards, and board games.
Various other methods had been attempted over the years to enable reading for the blind;
many of them raised versions of print letters. It is generally accepted that the braille
system has succeeded because it is based on a rational sequence of signs devised for the
fingertips, rather than imitating signs devised for the eyes.
Charles Barbiers Night-Writing
The history of braille goes all the way back to the early 1800s. A man named Charles
Barbier who served in Napoleon Bonapartes French army developed a unique system
known as night writing so soldiers could communicate safely during the night. Being a
military veteran, Barbier had seen several soldiers killed because they used lamps after
dark to read combat messages. The light shining from the lamps told enemy combatants
where the French soldiers were and inevitably led to the loss of many men.
Image of Charles Barbier's Sonography Table also known as "Night Writing"
Image showing Charles Barbiers Sonography Table, also known as Night Writing.
Photo source: ParisLessTraveled.WordPress.com
Barbier based his night writing system on a raised 12-dot cell; two dots wide and six
dots tall. Each dot or combination of dots within the cell represented a letter or a phonetic
sound. The problem with the military code was that the human fingertip could not feel all
the dots with one touch.