Hi,
Am Dienstag, 26. Juni 2012, 17:07:04 schrieben Sie:
That sounds good. This is the best thing I 've heard about, because of the
flexibility. I don't really understand what he meant. It wasn't clear to me
if he meant that you would have to add programming code of if he just meant
you have
Hi,
On Wed, Jun 27, 2012 at 3:25 AM, Peter Grasch gra...@simon-listens.orgwrote:
Hi,
Am Dienstag, 26. Juni 2012, 17:07:04 schrieben Sie:
That sounds good. This is the best thing I 've heard about, because of
the
flexibility. I don't really understand what he meant. It wasn't clear to
me
Hi,
Am Mittwoch, 27. Juni 2012, 06:54:44 schrieb meg ford:
I'm not sure though if it's good to start with so many (relatively) words
right away (I think it's around 35 words or so). A Dasher setup would lead
to
good results much quicker (only around 7 word).
Can you explain this? Are
, and which therefore falls
outside the range of what the tool is trained by default to process?
I don't know anything about the inner workings of speech recognition systems,
other than that they're based on statistical models and machine learning
algorithms. A free and open-source recognizer could
the needs of
people whose speech may be affected by a disability, and which therefore
falls outside the range of what the tool is trained by default to process?
I don't know anything about the inner workings of speech recognition
systems, other than that they're based on statistical models
work on Joe's part to get where he is
today. Because Joe is not physically able to write, it will not be
possible for him to seek employment after he finishes his PhD. Over
the years Joe has participated in various studies in an effort to find
speech recognition software that can adjust to his
Am Dienstag, 26. Juni 2012, 05:00:36 schrieb Bryen M Yunashko:
Not sure if this is useful, but there is an effort to collect voice
samples for use in speech-to-text engines. Voxforge.org
I have no idea how active or successful the project is.
Voxforges aim is to collect samples from
Hello,
Thanks to everyone for responding! Here is what Joe says in response:
That sounds good. This is the best thing I 've heard about, because of the
flexibility. I don't really understand what he meant. It wasn't clear to me
if he meant that you would have to add programming code of if he
is not physically able to write, it will not be possible
for him to seek employment after he finishes his PhD. Over the years Joe
has participated in various studies in an effort to find speech recognition
software that can adjust to his significant fluctuations in muscle tone.
Here is the reason I am
a lot of very hard work on Joe's part to get where he is
today. Because Joe is not physically able to write, it will not be possible
for him to seek employment after he finishes his PhD. Over the years Joe
has participated in various studies in an effort to find speech recognition
software
-- Forwarded message --
From: Daniel Alexandre [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, Oct 16, 2008 at 4:12 PM
Subject: MOUSEGRID - feature to speech recognition
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Would be nice if you had a feature to position
Hi,
I just wanted to share with the list the results of some experiments
that I've been doing with speech recognition (on Linux, sort of).
Basically, I'm using two machines next to each other, one running
Windows and the other with Linux and I pipe the text signal from the one
to the other
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