Advances in Speech Recognition [recurso electrónico] : Mobile Environments, Call Centers and Clinics / edited by Amy Neustein.

Por: Neustein, Amy [editor.]Colaborador(es): SpringerLink (Online service)Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: Boston, MA : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 2010Descripción: XXVI, 369 p. online resourceTipo de contenido: text Tipo de medio: computer Tipo de portador: online resourceISBN: 9781441959515Tema(s): Engineering | Computer science | Translators (Computer programs) | Engineering | Signal, Image and Speech Processing | Language Translation and Linguistics | User Interfaces and Human Computer InteractionFormatos físicos adicionales: Printed edition:: Sin títuloClasificación CDD: 621.382 Clasificación LoC:TK5102.9TA1637-1638TK7882.S65Recursos en línea: Libro electrónicoTexto
Contenidos:
Mobile Environments -- “Life on-the-Go”: The Role of Speech Technology in Mobile Applications -- “Striking a Healthy Balance”: Speech Technology in the Mobile Ecosystem -- “Why Tap When You Can Talk?”: Designing Multimodal Interfaces for Mobile Devices that Are Effective, Adaptive and Satisfying to the User -- “Your Word is my Command”: Google Search by Voice: A Case Study -- “Well Adjusted”: Using Robust and Flexible Speech Recognition Capabilities in Clean to Noisy Mobile Environments -- Call Centers -- “It’s the Best of All Possible Worlds”: Leveraging Multimodality to Improve Call Center Productivity -- “How am I Doing?”: A New Framework to Effectively Measure the Performance of Automated Customer Care Contact Centers -- “Great Expectations”: Making use of Callers’ Experiences from Everyday Life to Design a Satisfying Speech-only Interface for the Call Center -- “For Heaven’s Sake, Gimme a Live Person!” Designing Emotion-Detection Customer Care Voice Applications in Automated Call Centers -- “The Truth is Out There”: Using Advanced Speech Analytics to Learn Why Customers Call Help-line Desks and How Effectively They Are Being Served by the Call Center Agent -- Clinics -- Dr. “Multi-Task”: Using Speech to Build Up Electronic Medical Records While Caring for Patients -- “Hands Free”: Adapting the Task–Technology-Fit Model and Smart Data to Validate End-User Acceptance of the Voice Activated Medical Tracking Application (VAMTA) in the United States Military -- “You’re as Sick as You Sound”: Using Computational Approaches for Modeling Speaker State to Gauge Illness and Recovery -- “Cry Baby”: Using Spectrographic Analysis to Assess Neonatal Health Status from an Infant’s Cry.
En: Springer eBooksResumen: Advances in Speech Recognition provides a forum for today’s speech technology industry leaders – drawn from private enterprise and from academic institutions all over the world – to discuss the challenges, advances and aspirations of voice technology, which has become part of the working machinery of everyday life for consumers, corporations and healthcare providers both in the military and in the private sector. This anthology is divided into three sections – mobile environments, call centers and clinics – representing the research findings of over 30 industry experts: speech engineers, system designers, linguists, IT (information technology) and MIS (management information systems) specialists. Advances in Speech Recognition is introduced by speech industry icons Judith Markowitz and Bill Scholz who jointly wrote the book’s foreword. The book ends with a powerful coda by Jim Larson, who brilliantly forecasts in his epilogue the promises and, sometimes, the perils of advanced speech recognition technology. Advances in Speech Recognition is a useful book for speech software developers, speech engineers and others in the field of speech technology.
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Existencias
Tipo de ítem Biblioteca actual Colección Signatura Copia número Estado Fecha de vencimiento Código de barras
Libro Electrónico Biblioteca Electrónica
Colección de Libros Electrónicos TK5102.9 (Browse shelf(Abre debajo)) 1 No para préstamo 371541-2001

Mobile Environments -- “Life on-the-Go”: The Role of Speech Technology in Mobile Applications -- “Striking a Healthy Balance”: Speech Technology in the Mobile Ecosystem -- “Why Tap When You Can Talk?”: Designing Multimodal Interfaces for Mobile Devices that Are Effective, Adaptive and Satisfying to the User -- “Your Word is my Command”: Google Search by Voice: A Case Study -- “Well Adjusted”: Using Robust and Flexible Speech Recognition Capabilities in Clean to Noisy Mobile Environments -- Call Centers -- “It’s the Best of All Possible Worlds”: Leveraging Multimodality to Improve Call Center Productivity -- “How am I Doing?”: A New Framework to Effectively Measure the Performance of Automated Customer Care Contact Centers -- “Great Expectations”: Making use of Callers’ Experiences from Everyday Life to Design a Satisfying Speech-only Interface for the Call Center -- “For Heaven’s Sake, Gimme a Live Person!” Designing Emotion-Detection Customer Care Voice Applications in Automated Call Centers -- “The Truth is Out There”: Using Advanced Speech Analytics to Learn Why Customers Call Help-line Desks and How Effectively They Are Being Served by the Call Center Agent -- Clinics -- Dr. “Multi-Task”: Using Speech to Build Up Electronic Medical Records While Caring for Patients -- “Hands Free”: Adapting the Task–Technology-Fit Model and Smart Data to Validate End-User Acceptance of the Voice Activated Medical Tracking Application (VAMTA) in the United States Military -- “You’re as Sick as You Sound”: Using Computational Approaches for Modeling Speaker State to Gauge Illness and Recovery -- “Cry Baby”: Using Spectrographic Analysis to Assess Neonatal Health Status from an Infant’s Cry.

Advances in Speech Recognition provides a forum for today’s speech technology industry leaders – drawn from private enterprise and from academic institutions all over the world – to discuss the challenges, advances and aspirations of voice technology, which has become part of the working machinery of everyday life for consumers, corporations and healthcare providers both in the military and in the private sector. This anthology is divided into three sections – mobile environments, call centers and clinics – representing the research findings of over 30 industry experts: speech engineers, system designers, linguists, IT (information technology) and MIS (management information systems) specialists. Advances in Speech Recognition is introduced by speech industry icons Judith Markowitz and Bill Scholz who jointly wrote the book’s foreword. The book ends with a powerful coda by Jim Larson, who brilliantly forecasts in his epilogue the promises and, sometimes, the perils of advanced speech recognition technology. Advances in Speech Recognition is a useful book for speech software developers, speech engineers and others in the field of speech technology.

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