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speech recognition air and apology with long-winded explanation Re: [Acc
From: |
Eric S. Johansson |
Subject: |
speech recognition air and apology with long-winded explanation Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms |
Date: |
Wed, 28 Jul 2010 18:28:46 -0400 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.2.7) Gecko/20100713 Thunderbird/3.1.1 |
On 7/28/2010 5:22 PM, Eric S. Johansson wrote:
I don't believe I was arguing against your goals. I was arguing against your
lack of path to them or choices of innocence but I'll respect your request to
express things in a more constructive fashion. I will try to find a better
way to point out when you are on a potential path to failure like you are now
as well as potential paths to success.
bloody recognition errors
choices of innocence was a misrecognition. I can't remember what I was saying
but is probably something about lack of compassion to the disabled or putting
concern for the disabled first. I'm only guessing because I really don't
remember. Illustrates the need for a significant audio log in conjunction with
application use with speech recognition and content spoken. You see, we're
talking about is seriously different environment than the classic GUI. Can you
imagine instant messenger/IRC environment where you go back in time to correct a
line? You need to do that if using speech recognition to fix mistakes. Let them
implies others have the right to go back and change what they said in response
to your correction thereby erasing whole sequences of writing from the memory of
channel. Very cool user interface/user interaction. Gives you a chance to
retract a statement and make an apology thereby creating a chain where
communications that may have been close by anger/testosterone can be reopened
and the harsh bits are expunged. Imagine the same thing applied to e-mail. That
the sender can send a second message to overwrite the first while leaving an
audit trail. That's very cool in my book. It's constructive social engineering.
It's also cool way to sneak in cryptography.
the error above highlights one of the problems with speech recognition, you can
get a statement which sounds completely correct[1] but is not what the person
said giving an entirely wrong impression. The biggest errors I'm finding here
are on vacation, wrong verb tense, and a version of sense (negation, and
inversion of sense (sentence meaning).
--- eric
[1] in NaturallySpeaking the word correct is used to invoke of right correction
sequences. So if you say something like completely correct but not what the
person said and put a space after correct, the subsequent phrase is used as a
search key. Very annoying and yet another reason why short phrases are bad
I'm sure there are other misrecognition errors lurking in my text
- Re: [Accessibility] resident evil, (continued)
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Rui Batista, 2010/07/30
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Jason White, 2010/07/30
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Bryen M. Yunashko, 2010/07/30
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Jason White, 2010/07/30
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Richard Stallman, 2010/07/28
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Eric S. Johansson, 2010/07/28
- speech recognition air and apology with long-winded explanation Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms,
Eric S. Johansson <=
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Richard Stallman, 2010/07/28
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Richard Stallman, 2010/07/25
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Richard Stallman, 2010/07/25
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Steve Holmes, 2010/07/26
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Eric S. Johansson, 2010/07/26
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Chris Hofstader, 2010/07/26
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Eric S. Johansson, 2010/07/26
- Message not available
- Fwd: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Tony Sales, 2010/07/26
- Re: Fwd: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Eric S. Johansson, 2010/07/26
- Re: [Accessibility] Call to Arms, Eric S. Johansson, 2010/07/26