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Speech Recognition for Control

Hugo Moreno ESPOCH-ECUADOR IEEE Member

AGENDA
Introduction Speech Recognition Application in Control Conclusions

Introduction

Introduction
VISION
To be a leading institution in the Top Education and in the scientific and technological support for the socioeconomic and cultural development of the province of Chimborazo and of the country, with quality, relevancy and social recognition

Speech Recognition
speaker recognition
recognizing who is speaking frequencies

speech recognition
recognizing what is being said

accuracy and speed

Speech Recognition
The process of converting a speech signal to a sequence of words in the form of digital data or discrete data, by means of an algorithm implemented as a computer program (microcontroller)

Speech Recognition
Speech Signal Acquisition
LPF AB = 4KHz 8Ks/s 8-16 bits

Speech Verification

feature extraction and selection,


Poles and Zeros Correlation Levinson Durbin Markov (HMW) DTW

pattern matching, classification.

Speech Recognition
100
1 0.8 0.6

80

60
0.4 0.2 0

40

20
-0.2 -0.4 -0.6

-20
-0.8 -1

0.5

1.5

2.5 x 10
4

-40

100

200

300

400

500

600

Signal Acquisition
Original Pattern

Correlation (MATLAB)

Speech Recognition
1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 -0.2 -0.4 -0.6 -0.8 -1

0.5

1.5

2.5 x 10
4

Signal Acquisition
Original Pattern Poles and Zeros (MATLAB)

Application in Control
Elevator

Application in Control
Speech Biometric Recognition

Used to determine the stress status. Stress Control using a special kind of music.

Application in Control
Control for Robot Automatic translation Automotive speech recognition Court reporting (Realtime Voice Writing) Speech Biometric Recognition Hands- free computing Home automation Pronunciation evaluation in computer-aided language learning applications Transcription (digital speech-to-text).

Conclusions
Speech recognition involves the ability to match a voice pattern against a provided or acquired vocabulary Speech recognition is used to make control Speech recognition has an acceptable accuracy, but better accuracy implies less speed.

References
IEEE SIGNAL PROCESSING MAGAZINE PROCEEDINGS OF THE IEEE WANG Ye-Yi,Deng Li and Acero Alex, Spoken Language Understanding, IEEE SIGNAL PROCESSING MAGAZINE [16] SEPTEMBER 2005. CAMPBELL JOSEPH P. Speaker Recognition: A Tutorial, PROCEEDINGS OF THE IEEE, VOL. 85, NO. 9, SEPTEMBER 1997 DENG Li, Wang Kuansan and Chou Wu, Speech Technology and Systems in Human-Machine Communication, IEEE SIGNAL PROCESSING MAGAZINE [12] SEPTEMBER 2005

Thanks for your attention .. Best Regards


Hugo Moreno oswaldo_m@ieee.org ESPOCH-ECUADOR IEEE Member

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