Xinyi Su, Guangyu He, et al.
Dianli Xitong Zidonghua/Automation of Electric Power Systems
With a listening typewriter, what an author says would be automatically recognized and displayed in front of him or her. However, speech recognition is not yet advanced enough to provide people with a reliable listening typewriter. An aim of our experiments was to determine if an imperfect listening typewriter would be useful for composing letters. Participants dictated letters, either in isolated words or in consecutive word speech. They did this with simulations of listening typewriters that recognized either a limited vocabulary (1000 or 5000 words)or an unlimited vocabulary. Results suggest that some versions, even upon first using them, could be at least as good as traditional methods of handwriting and dictating. Isolated word speech with large vocabularies may provide the basis for a useful listening typewriter. © 1983, ACM. All rights reserved.
Xinyi Su, Guangyu He, et al.
Dianli Xitong Zidonghua/Automation of Electric Power Systems
Donald Samuels, Ian Stobert
SPIE Photomask Technology + EUV Lithography 2007
B.K. Boguraev, Mary S. Neff
HICSS 2000
Michael C. McCord, Violetta Cavalli-Sforza
ACL 2007