Spoken communication is what largely separates humans from other
animals. It permits us to communicate information effectively and with
little apparent effort. Although online text and video resources have
vastly increased our ability to communicate with each other via
computer technology, speech is still the means of communication used
first and foremost by humans for information exchange. Can advances in
speech recognition, speaker recognition, and speech synthesis make
spoken language as convenient and as accessible as online text as a
means of communicating via computer technology? In this symposium,
these three technologies--speech recognition, speaker recognition,
speech synthesis--will be surveyed from an historical perspective and
in the context of social factors that have affected technological
trends. The symposium will begin with a presentation that provides a
general overview of the field. Pairs of experts will then survey
recent progress in each of the three technologies, compare the
technology with human performance, discuss applications, show
demonstrations, and make some predictions for the future. Both
industrial and academic aspects of the technologies will be
considered.
Presented at the
annual meeting
of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science
on Saturday, February 19, 2000, from 3:00pm - 6:00pm.
Supported in part by the
Acoustical Society of America.