Morse code can be sent through touch. short and long taps on the palm or shoulder. making it one of several communication systems used by deafblind individuals when other channels are unavailable.
Tactile Morse is slower than tactile sign or print-on-palm methods, but it has advantages: anyone can learn to send it, no specialized vocabulary is needed, and it works through gloves, jackets, or even a steady drumbeat on a hard surface.
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The sender taps short pulses (dots) and longer pulses (dashes) on the receiver's palm, shoulder, or back. Letter and word gaps follow the standard ITU spacing rules so the receiver can distinguish characters.
It's used as a backup or supplement to more common methods like Tadoma, tactile sign language, and Braille. It's particularly useful in noisy or unpredictable environments where other systems are hard to apply.
The symbols and timing are identical. dots, dashes, and ITU spacing. The only difference is the channel: instead of sound or light, the signal is delivered as touch.
A flashlight is most useful for deaf (not deafblind) signaling. For deafblind training, a small vibration motor or a partner's tap is the right input. The MorseKit flashlight tool can teach a sighted partner the rhythm before they practice tactile delivery.
Memorera snabbare -> Hamta appen