It would be great if some of this stuff could be summarised in a FAQ in
the DC Wiki. (But hold off on that until I've made another announcement
later this week...)
Best,
Gabriel
Ian Ruffell a écrit :
> Thanks for the responses.
>
> On Monday 16 October 2006 10:01, James Cummings wrote:
>> I'd be interested in knowing more about how/why/what you envision the
>> outputs of this project to be?
> - Classical Greek
> - mostly as an accessibility tool
> - secondary aim of integration with pedagogical tools
>
>> Well, voice-activation and speech recognition work is taking place in many
>> countries.
> Well, indeed. But as we know Classical and Modern Greek represent distinct
> challenges and markets. The commercial incentives for the regular players in
> voice technology to expand to the classical field are limited.
>
> I was thinking of working with cross-platform open-source projects such as
> Festival and Festvox - http://www.cstr.ed.ac.uk/projects/festival/ and
> http://festvox.org - and CMU Sphinx for recognition
> [http://sourceforge.net/projects/cmusphinx].
>
> The work with JAWS looks very interesting and in part the kind of thing I was
> suggesting. But in general I was thinking about something less tied to
> Windows+Office and potentially more flexible.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Ian
>
--
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Dr Gabriel BODARD
Inscriptions of Aphrodisias
Centre for Computing in the Humanities
King's College London
Kay House
7, Arundel Street
London WC2R 3DX
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Tel: +44 (0)20 78 48 13 88
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