RailroadBookstore.com

Railroad Books - Model Railroad Books - Thomas & Friends
Photography Books - Gardening Books

Photography Books

Huge Selection - Discount Prices - Money Back Guarantee

We offer a huge selection of photography books at discount prices. All purchases have a money back satisfaction guarantee. Thank you for shopping here!

Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
Guidebooks
Canon
Hasselblad
Kodak
Leica
Nikon
Pentax
Sony
Magic Lantern Guides
Categories
General
Black & White
Color
Digital
Equipment
How To
Nature & Wildlife
Photo Essays
Photojournalism
Reference
Travel
Photoshop
Lightroom
Railroad Photography
Images of Rail Series
Subcategories
All Titles
Arts & Photography
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Engineering
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
General AAS
Home & Garden
Literature & Fiction
Medicine
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Science
Teens
Travel
Mass Market
Trade

The Art and Business of Speech Recognition: Creating the Noble Voice

The Art and Business of Speech Recognition: Creating the Noble Voice

zoom enlarge 
Author: Blade Kotelly
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional
Category: Book

List Price: $29.99
Buy New: $14.30
You Save: $15.69 (52%)



New (12) Used (13) from $7.72

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 789046

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 208
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 7.2 x 0.6

ISBN: 0321154924
Dewey Decimal Number: 384.64
UPC: 785342154924
EAN: 9780321154927
ASIN: 0321154924

Publication Date: February 1, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available

Similar Items:

  • Voice User Interface Design
  • Voice Interaction Design: Crafting the New Conversational Speech Systems (Morgan Kaufmann Series in Interactive Technologies)
  • Wired for Speech: How Voice Activates and Advances the Human-Computer Relationship
  • Designing Effective Speech Interfaces
  • Pro Microsoft Speech Server 2007: Developing Speech Enabled Applications with .NET (Pro)

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Achieving robust function with a human spin   June 1, 2003
 7 out of 10 found this review helpful

Blade Kotelly is the one person in voice design whose attention to the human possibilities of a well-designed voice user interface provides assurance that humanizing our machines will not mechanize humanity. This treatment does not, however, merely try to convince aspiring designers to make their interfaces sound human. It illustrates how a designer can avoid ambiguity, aim for the most graceful styles of retries and error recovery, and how emotive responses can help to implicitly communicate the system's capabilities and limitations without requiring lengthy, explicit descriptions to be read out.

Though they are sometimes subtle, the issues and solutions outlined here are broadly explained, and this fosters an appreciation of each and leaves readers better equipped to anticipate where the next one may lie.

Kotelly is not delivering a text book which seeks to catalog countless dos and don'ts of design. Rather, he takes what I feel is the proper tack of showing by example how problems arise and listing not one, but a variety of choices a designer could make to avoid the problem. The result is not a series of commandments, but a richly illustrated outline of a well-developed philosophy of design and depiction. The work, I feel, helps the reader to appreciate the impulses that shaped Kotelly's leading work in the field, and to promote in him/her a sense of how they can develop their own affinity for designing systems that work efficiently and are received warmly.

If you truly think that a book will help you break into this field or expand your mastery within it, this is an excellent choice. It will inform you and prompt you to think well beyond the content it directly offers. It is perfect to get you thinking more passionately and expansively of what is possible in voice user interface design.


5 out of 5 stars Very lucid; don't be scared off by the subject   February 24, 2003
 9 out of 15 found this review helpful

Speech recognition as a commercial product is still very new. In 1988, when I was first involved with it, the state of the art did not involve real time capability. You had to record the utterance and then analyse it with a computer. Typically, you also had to train the software with the speaker beforehand.

Now, we have commercially available real time, speaker independent products. Some of the largest companies, like United Airlines and ATT, have deployed these, to try and reduce call centre costs, and to improve the user's experience when dialling into such a place. Are you considering installing such software? Of course, you can talk to the vendors. But where can you get objective advice? One possibility is to ask researchers in the field. But they can easily and inadvertantly drown you in jargon, especially if you do not have a technical background. This book attempts to fill that need. You do not need a degree in computer science or maths to understand it.

The book does not explain how speech recognition works. Rather the emphasis is at a higher level: Using it in your workplace. The author gives many lucid examples of this. Basically, he outlines a commonsensical appproach that can be understood by anybody. He explains how not to overburden the user with long utterances full of information, but to take advantage of the context of the conversation to omit unnecessary details. He emphasises thorough testing, with a disciplined scaling up to a real life deployment in a call centre. Something that may well have been omitted in other deployments, leading to users gnashing their teeth in frustration at an obtuse dialog, or at busy phone lines.

He also discusses why companies should regard this as part of their corporate branding, and how to choose an appropriate "noble" voice as part of that branding. I think the "noble" sounds rather pompous, actually. But that's not his fault! It is a standard phrase in this field, and you too might get used to it.


Copyright 2008 - RailroadBookstore.com