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  2. Whisper (speech recognition system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whisper_(speech...

    Whisper is a machine learning model for speech recognition and transcription, created by OpenAI and first released as open-source software in September 2022. [2]It is capable of transcribing speech in English and several other languages, and is also capable of translating several non-English languages into English. [1]

  3. Speaker recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speaker_recognition

    Each speaker recognition system has two phases: enrollment and verification. During enrollment, the speaker's voice is recorded and typically a number of features are extracted to form a voice print, template, or model. In the verification phase, a speech sample or "utterance" is compared against a previously created voice print.

  4. List of speech recognition software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_speech_recognition...

    Tazti – Create speech command profiles to play PC games and control applications – programs. Create speech commands to open files, folders, webpages, applications. Windows 7, Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 versions. [5] Voice Finger – software that improves the Windows speech recognition system by adding several extensions to it. The software ...

  5. Speech recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_recognition

    Speech recognition is a multi-leveled pattern recognition task. Acoustical signals are structured into a hierarchy of units, e.g. Phonemes, Words, Phrases, and Sentences; Each level provides additional constraints; e.g. Known word pronunciations or legal word sequences, which can compensate for errors or uncertainties at a lower level;

  6. Gestalt pattern matching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gestalt_Pattern_Matching

    Gestalt pattern matching, [1] also Ratcliff/Obershelp pattern recognition, [2] is a string-matching algorithm for determining the similarity of two strings. It was developed in 1983 by John W. Ratcliff and John A. Obershelp and published in the Dr. Dobb's Journal in July 1988.

  7. Speaker diarisation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speaker_diarisation

    Speaker diarisation (or diarization) is the process of partitioning an audio stream containing human speech into homogeneous segments according to the identity of each speaker. [1] It can enhance the readability of an automatic speech transcription by structuring the audio stream into speaker turns and, when used together with speaker ...

  8. CMU Sphinx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CMU_Sphinx

    Sphinx is a continuous-speech, speaker-independent recognition system making use of hidden Markov acoustic models and an n-gram statistical language model. It was developed by Kai-Fu Lee. Sphinx featured feasibility of continuous-speech, speaker-independent large-vocabulary recognition, the possibility of which was in dispute at the time (1986).

  9. TRACE (psycholinguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRACE_(psycholinguistics)

    TRACE is a connectionist model of speech perception, proposed by James McClelland and Jeffrey Elman in 1986. [1] It is based on a structure called "the TRACE", a dynamic processing structure made up of a network of units, which performs as the system's working memory as well as the perceptual processing mechanism. [2]