This report is being published under the aegis of the journa! Artificial Intelligence. The journal will, from time to time, publish as special issues reports, monographs, surveys, etc., which for some good reason---e.g, sizeuare not appropriate for incorporation in its regular runs. This is the firs
Speech understanding systems: Report of a steering committee
โ Scribed by M.F. Medress; F.S. Cooper; J.W. Forgie; C.C. Green; D.H. Klatt; M.H. O'Malley; E.P. Neuburg; A. Newell; D.R. Reddy; B. Ritea; J.E. Shoup-Hummel; D.E. Walker; W.A. Woods
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 753 KB
- Volume
- 9
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0004-3702
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A five-year interdisciplinary effort by speech scientists and computer scientists has demmtstrated the feasibility of programming a computer system to "understand" connected speech, i.e., translate it into operational form and respond accordingly. An operational system (HARP Y) accepts speech from five speakers, interprets a lO00-word vocabulary, and attains 91 percent sentence accuracy. This Steerhlg Committee summary report describes the project history, problem, goals, and results.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
This report is being published under the aegis of the journal Artificial Intelligence. The journal will, from time to time, publish as special issues reports, monographs, surveys, etc., which for some good reason--e.g. ~ize--are not appropriate for incorporation in its regular runs. This is the firs
An important problem in automatic speech understanding is the transport of an existing application system to a new language. Design choices are required to keep the cost and implementation time of the porting as low as possible. One of the bottlenecks in spoken language system development is represe
Evolution of the Original (Empirical) to the Present-day (Exact) Coirtposition.-O. Liining contributes the results of an inquiry into the gradual evolution of the originally simple, though empirical formula given by Fehling (1818), to that modernly insisted on, which requires great exactitude in the