Educated as a chemist and having worked as a physicist, Paget held a deep interest in various fields of science. He was also well-versed in music and the arts (and had written several songs as well as constructed his own musical instruments), but his reputation was that of an "eccentric amateur" scientist. Sir Richard's daughter,
Pamela Paget (later
Lady Glenconner), was often a subject of his experiments. Pamela's nephew and Sir Richard's grandson,
Alexander Chancellor, wrote in his "Long Life" column in
The Spectator that Pamela had broken her arm when Sir Richard encouraged her to throw herself backwards from the open platform of a
London bus on
Park Lane to demonstrate his theory that, due to air currents, one could fall horizontally from a bus travelling at a certain speed and land safely on the road. According to Lady Glenconner's obituary in
The Telegraph, Sir Richard had also filled his daughters' ears with
treacle (to simulate deafness) while testing his sign language system. His book on these ideas,
Human Speech, was published in 1930, and was re-issued in 1964 due to its connections with later developments in communication engineering. In the 1930s, Sir Richard began developing a
manually coded sign language system. He collaborated with the librarian at the Royal National Institute for the Deaf,
Pierre Gorman, to develop the system further. Upon his death in 1955, his widow, Lady
Grace Paget, continued the work with Gorman, and the resulting
Paget Gorman Sign System was widely used in the education of deaf children in Britain from the 1960s to the 1980s. ==Marriage and children==