Yes, thank you, that's exactly what I did mean: speech-to-text software.
I know about the Nuance family, and also some Linux-based products. I'd
like recommendations of what works well.
On 5/1/2016 4:21 PM, Levy, Michael wrote:
As I read Peter Rooney's question, I think Peter is asking about automated
speech-to-text, as opposed to systems to aid human transcription.
However, in the latter category,I would look at Amara, which is a nonprofit
organization that provides free aids for creating captions (along with
fee-based systems suitable for managing large-scale transcription projects:
https://amara.org
I would also look at Oral History Metadata Synchronizer from University of
Kentucky: http://www.oralhistoryonline.org
Peter, if you are interested in speech-to-text software, let the list know
and I'm sure there are people who can share their experiences.
On Apr 27, 2016, at 2:36 PM, Peter Rooney <[email protected]>
wrote:
Is there a program that can "listen" to an oral interview and transcribe it
into text? such a program would need to deal with various persons'voices. The
interviewer, however, would remain the same, as well as the general subject matter.
Considerable cleanup might be necessary, but that is okay so long as understandable
speech can be captured.
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