This document describes how Jean-Do communicates using blinks after suffering a paralyzing stroke. One blink in a single black flash frame means "yes", while two blinks across two black flash frames means "no". The black flash frame shows Jean-Do blinking to answer a question posed in the subtitle of the film The Diving Bell and the Butterfly.
This document describes how Jean-Do communicates using blinks after suffering a paralyzing stroke. One blink in a single black flash frame means "yes", while two blinks across two black flash frames means "no". The black flash frame shows Jean-Do blinking to answer a question posed in the subtitle of the film The Diving Bell and the Butterfly.
This document describes how Jean-Do communicates using blinks after suffering a paralyzing stroke. One blink in a single black flash frame means "yes", while two blinks across two black flash frames means "no". The black flash frame shows Jean-Do blinking to answer a question posed in the subtitle of the film The Diving Bell and the Butterfly.
frame (frame 3), sandwiched in between one-frame dissolves (frames 2 and 4), brilliantly simulates how Jean-Do communicates with his only non-paralyzec part - his left eye, One blink - one black flash frame - means "oui": two blinks - two black flash frames - mean, "non," And the answi to the question in the subtitle is (frame 3)