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  2. Microphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microphone

    Microphones are used in many applications such as telephones, hearing aids, public address systems for concert halls and public events, motion picture production, live and recorded audio engineering, sound recording, two-way radios, megaphones, and radio and television broadcasting.

  3. Wireless microphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wireless_microphone

    A wireless microphone, or cordless microphone, is a microphone without a physical cable connecting it directly to the sound recording or amplifying equipment with which it is associated. Also known as a radio microphone , it has a small, battery-powered radio transmitter in the microphone body, which transmits the audio signal from the ...

  4. Peripheral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peripheral

    Peripheral. A peripheral device, or simply peripheral, is an auxiliary hardware device that a computer uses to transfer information externally. [1] A peripheral is a hardware component that is accessible to and controlled by a computer but is not a core component of the computer. A peripheral can be categorized based on the direction in which ...

  5. Speech recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_recognition

    Speech recognition is an interdisciplinary subfield of computer science and computational linguistics that develops methodologies and technologies that enable the recognition and translation of spoken language into text by computers. It is also known as automatic speech recognition ( ASR ), computer speech recognition or speech-to-text ( STT ).

  6. Voice computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voice_computing

    The Amazon Echo, an example of a voice computer. Voice computing is the discipline that develops hardware or software to process voice inputs.. It spans many other fields including human-computer interaction, conversational computing, linguistics, natural language processing, automatic speech recognition, speech synthesis, audio engineering, digital signal processing, cloud computing, data ...

  7. Headphones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headphones

    Headphones are a pair of small loudspeaker drivers worn on or around the head over a user's ears. They are electroacoustic transducers, which convert an electrical signal to a corresponding sound. Headphones let a single user listen to an audio source privately, in contrast to a loudspeaker, which emits sound into the open air for anyone nearby ...

  8. Noise-canceling microphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise-canceling_microphone

    The microphone's diaphragm is placed between the two ports; sound arriving from an ambient sound field reaches both ports more or less equally. Sound that's much closer to the front port than to the rear will make more of a pressure gradient between the front and back of the diaphragm, causing it to move more.

  9. Microphone array - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microphone_array

    A microphone array is any number of microphones operating in tandem. There are many applications: Locating objects by sound: acoustic source localization, e.g., military use to locate the source (s) of artillery fire. Aircraft location and tracking. Typically, an array is made up of omnidirectional microphones, directional microphones, or a mix ...