<p> Here is an app that would teach you a foreign language without eating up your precious time!<br /><br /></p>.<p>The researchers have developed the app to fill the time gap we spend waiting for a friend or co-worker to respond while we are chatting on GChat.<br /><br />WaitChatter, a Chrome extension for GChat, generates interactive foreign language vocabulary exercises, so you can make the most of your time as a conversation partner is typing out a response.<br /><br />Carrie Cai, a PhD student at MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab, discovered that the average person spends up to 15 minutes a day waiting for replies, in other words about an hour and a half a week.<br /><br />"But what if you could do something constructive with those moments like, say, learn a language? That's precisely what the new app provides," Cai said in MIT Technology Review.<br /><br />And what makes the system effective is that it detects when you are waiting for an instant message.<br /><br />"This integrated approach, which we call 'wait-learning', is far less likely to be perceived as time consuming or intrusive compared to using a separate learning app," Cai said.<br />Another key differentiator is that WaitChatter is embedded right within the chatbox.<br /><br />With most other micro-learning apps, like Duolingo, users may feel as if they have to make a significant extra effort or set aside time to study up.<br /><br />With WaitChatter, they don't have to close a window or even switch apps, since it's incorporated into the programme they are already using.<br /><br />WaitChatter has been tested in two languages: French and Spanish.In a two-week pilot study, WaitChatter users learned an average of four words per day. The system pulls words from both a built-in list and from the user's ongoing chat conversations.<br /><br />For example, people discussing their pets might be quizzed on terms about animals, while those chatting about an upcoming Starbucks date will learn words for "coffee" and "tea".</p>
<p> Here is an app that would teach you a foreign language without eating up your precious time!<br /><br /></p>.<p>The researchers have developed the app to fill the time gap we spend waiting for a friend or co-worker to respond while we are chatting on GChat.<br /><br />WaitChatter, a Chrome extension for GChat, generates interactive foreign language vocabulary exercises, so you can make the most of your time as a conversation partner is typing out a response.<br /><br />Carrie Cai, a PhD student at MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab, discovered that the average person spends up to 15 minutes a day waiting for replies, in other words about an hour and a half a week.<br /><br />"But what if you could do something constructive with those moments like, say, learn a language? That's precisely what the new app provides," Cai said in MIT Technology Review.<br /><br />And what makes the system effective is that it detects when you are waiting for an instant message.<br /><br />"This integrated approach, which we call 'wait-learning', is far less likely to be perceived as time consuming or intrusive compared to using a separate learning app," Cai said.<br />Another key differentiator is that WaitChatter is embedded right within the chatbox.<br /><br />With most other micro-learning apps, like Duolingo, users may feel as if they have to make a significant extra effort or set aside time to study up.<br /><br />With WaitChatter, they don't have to close a window or even switch apps, since it's incorporated into the programme they are already using.<br /><br />WaitChatter has been tested in two languages: French and Spanish.In a two-week pilot study, WaitChatter users learned an average of four words per day. The system pulls words from both a built-in list and from the user's ongoing chat conversations.<br /><br />For example, people discussing their pets might be quizzed on terms about animals, while those chatting about an upcoming Starbucks date will learn words for "coffee" and "tea".</p>