아이엠톡(AIamTalk)

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Everyone
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About this app

When Younghee's mother from Seoul moves to Busan, she becomes close with Cheolsu's mother next door, who only speaks the native Busan dialect. Younghee's mother, who does not know the Busan dialect, only speaks Seoul, but as time goes by, although her vocabulary is Seoul, her accent changes to that of the Busan dialect. What happens as more time passes? The Seoul dialect is hard to remember, like the name of a friend I haven't seen in a long time, and the Busan dialect comes to mind first. In the end, it gets closer to the Busan dialect. Did Younghee’s mother try to memorize and remember the Busan dialect? This happens even if you don't do it at all.

As an adult, won't I be able to acquire language as easily as I did as a baby? If dialect is learned automatically, can English be learned the same way? What is the hidden principle behind the automatic acquisition of dialect? The author of this app, Kim Se-gil (hereinafter referred to as Kim Sam), is a person who researched this principle for over 30 years and received a patent. A professional programmer who only knows computer programs would need too much time and study to implement the algorithm that Sam Kim found, so Sam Kim himself studied the program for 4 years and 6 months as if he was studying for a civil service examination, and coded it line by line with craftsmanship. The program created is Kim Sam English I Am Talk. So what is the algorithm that created this program?

What happens if you ring a bell every time you feed your dog? Even if you don't feed them, they will start drooling at the sound of the bell. Has your dog memorized ‘A bell means food is coming!’? Ironically, if you don't memorize it, saliva will come out on its own. Because this is Pavlov's law, it is a conditioned reflex of the autonomic nervous system, not the brain.

By this principle, humans also naturally acquire language as babies.
A newborn baby's IQ is around 30. The age at which children acquire language and speak infant language is around 3 years old, and their IQ at this time is approximately 60. A smart dog has an IQ of 70. Would a baby with a learning intelligence index lower than this have learned the language by memorizing it? Babies who do not memorize their native language learn their native language very quickly on their own. How is this possible? If we know and apply this principle, wouldn't we be able to learn foreign languages ​​as quickly as a baby? Let me explain the principle.

When a baby cries, is there any mother who just lets the baby cry, thinking, 'The baby must be crying because he's bored!' A mother who loves her baby instinctively thinks that there must be some reason when the baby cries. Then they say various things to try to find out why they are crying. Ask ‘Are you hungry?’ to breastfeed, ‘Have you pooped?’ to change your baby’s diaper, and ‘Are you bored?’ to shake the rattle. In this way, the mother talks and acts like she is broadcasting a soccer or baseball game. And soon, the mother learns exactly why the baby cries through the sound and time of the baby's cries. When a baby is hungry, there comes a moment when they say ‘I’m hungry!’ and this is the moment when Pavlov’s law applies, which causes the dog to hear a bell. In this way, we acquire our native language as babies without even realizing it.

Although this principle has been known for decades, it has been very difficult to create learning materials that embody this principle. It was like not being able to build a time machine even if you knew Einstein's special principle of relativity, which states that you can go back in time by traveling faster than light.

However, with the advancement of technology, we have become able to do things that were never possible before. Artificial intelligence, which was no match for humans, is now like overpowering humans in the game of baduk. So what has changed with super-large AI to make it possible?

People who have lived in the United States know that linguistically, it is no different from living in Korea if you do not converse with Americans. Therefore, the principle of learning one's native language is applied only through conversation. However, at least in Korean, you have to have something to say. Just as you need something to eat to drink properly, you need something to talk about to be able to talk. A curious baby is curious about everything that is new to him. That's why there's so much to talk about, but not for grown adults.

Kim Se-gil (Kim Sam), the author of this program, solved this problem with 1,335 situational stories from 10 books for the Simpo English Writing Special Class, which he wrote over the course of five years. When you press the button, a random situation story, photo, and English mission out of 1335 will appear. Therefore, learners do not have to worry about what to say.

However, if you can easily say the English missions in English, you do not need to learn English. Also, the baby cries and the mother speaks in response, not the baby's native language.
Therefore, there is no need for learners to intentionally make English writing difficult. So how did you solve this part? When you press the interpretation button, a huge AI interprets the English text and writes it down for you.

The learner simply hears the voice and thinks, 'Ah, that's what you're saying!' All you have to do is press the Google Voice input button and speak again. In other words, what happens? Google's giant AI writes sentences after listening to your English pronunciation in the input window.

As this situation is repeated, the pronunciation is automatically corrected. Just as Seoul Younghee's mother automatically changes to a Busan accent, her accent gradually changes and her pronunciation improves.

That's not all. We automatically remember the location of the car accident. And until the day he dies, every time he passes that area, he relays to the person next to him how the accident occurred, like a soccer broadcast. Why did I remember this spontaneously?

Our brain has a mechanism to automatically remember events that occur by chance. The situations that suddenly appear to the baby are the mechanism by which the baby automatically acquires vocabulary. Babies do not memorize words or sentences, but learn them through memorization. Even adults don't spend the rest of their lives wondering how many new people's names they will have to learn by heart. This is because if you call 100 or 1,000 people, you don't have to worry about the names of people that will be memorized automatically. Therefore, this coincidence must be added for it to be complete.

Even if it is a coincidence that the 1,335 situational English writing missions come out automatically at the push of a button through random number processing, you must encounter the sentences you encountered by chance again in another chance to acquire language. What this means is, the baby hears what it hears from its mother from its father, who suddenly appears, and what it hears from its father, it hears from its aunt, uncle, older sister, or older brother, who suddenly appears. You will also have the opportunity to use the words you have learned in a variety of places and times with a variety of people. To apply this principle, you need to build on what the learner said, accompanied by a picture of another situation in which the word would be used. This was solved with super-large AI.

Through this app, you can now see the algorithm that draws English sentences spoken by learners into pictures to be used. Other people who can use the same sentence are available at the touch of a button. It doesn't end here.

We even added a free-talking function that provides answers from a huge AI that is difficult to tell if it is artificial intelligence and translates into Korean in real time.

And since you are an adult who has learned Korean, which has a completely different structure from English, you may need an explanation of the structure of English to make it feel native. Sam Kim personally recorded and recorded his native language explanation for each of the 1,335 situational sentences to explain how to think sequentially.

Since this program uses a very large AI, Sam Kim must cover the AI ​​server usage fees, so it cannot be provided for free. This program has been prepared as inexpensively as possible. And for those who are just starting out, we have prepared a certain amount of experience for free.
To create this program, Sam Kim had to write 26 books, research for over 30 years, and even learn program coding such as Android Java, Kotlin, and JavaScript. No matter how good a medicine is, you have to take it to be effective. Please try this Kimsam English I Am Talk, which we have created with great effort over a long period of time, and experience for yourself what it is like to learn English like a baby. Trust^^
Updated on
Sep 27, 2024

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What's new

AIamTalk 3.1 - You can easily learn Korean like a dialect with AI.

App support

Phone number
+821097044004
About the developer
김세길
tissueflower@gmail.com
대정읍 하모백사로 27-2 단독 1층 서귀포시, 제주특별자치도 63513 South Korea
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