News

Bringing speech recognition to the low-power microcontroller you’d find in an Arduino sounds like the work of a mad scientist or Ph.D. candidate, but that’s exactly what [Arjo Chakravarty] did.
The lowly Arduino, an 8-bit AVR microcontroller with a pitiful amount of RAM, terribly small Flash storage space, and effectively no peripherals to speak of, has better speech recognition ...
IBM was unable to provide a comment on this issue at the time of writing. Another hope for Linux users who need speech-recognition software is Sphinx, an open-source speech recognition project.
A new research initiative aims to make voice recognition technology more useful for people with a range of diverse speech patterns and disabilities.
From the voice-to-text feature on your phone to the captions that make videos more accessible, speech transcription is ...
As part of new efforts towards accessibility, Google announced Project Euphonia at I/O in May: An attempt to make speech recognition capable of understanding people with non-standard speaking ...
The University of Illinois (UIUC) is working with Apple and other tech giants on the Speech Accessibility Project, which aims to improve voice recognition systems for people with speech patterns ...