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Kaldi is an open-source speech recognition toolkit written in C++ for speech recognition and signal processing, freely available under the Apache License v2.0.. Kaldi aims to provide software that is flexible and extensible, [2] and is intended for use by automatic speech recognition (ASR) researchers for building a recognition system.
The goal of the SEMAINE project was to develop a virtual agent with emotional and social intelligence. In this system, openSMILE was applied for real-time analysis of speech and emotion. The final SEMAINE software release is based on openSMILE version 1.0.1. In 2009, the emotion recognition toolkit (openEAR) was published based on openSMILE.
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 enables controlling the mouse and the keyboard by only using the voice.
Speech recognition remains a challenging problem in AI and machine learning. In a step toward solving it, OpenAI today open-sourced Whisper, an automatic speech recognition system that the company ...
Julius is a speech recognition engine, specifically a high-performance, two-pass large vocabulary continuous speech recognition (LVCSR) decoder software for speech-related researchers and developers. It can perform almost real-time computing (RTC) decoding on most current personal computers (PCs) in 60k word dictation task using word trigram (3 ...
CMU Sphinx, a group of speech recognition systems developed at Carnegie Mellon University. [67] DeepSpeech, an open-source Speech-To-Text engine based on Baidu's deep speech research paper. [68] Whisper, an open-source speech recognition system developed at OpenAI. [69]
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).
Simon is open source software for speech dictation, used among the KDE library. [1] It can permit to interact with a Windows, Unix-like/Linux computer, via KDE environment, to replace keyboard/mouse with voice requests. [2] Simon is among the KDE Gear applications group. [3]