If one ever wanted to describe an intractable problem this is it.
The hard reality is that for this to achieve near perfection, it will
be necessary to produce artificial cognition that simulates
ourselves. The speaker needs to know when the wrong choice has been
supplied. It also needs to anticipate.
Yet we have already learned that we can work with near enough for
incoming information and human cognition. The other way is quite a
different matter.
Yet this is were a coaching protocol is necessary just as we do in
language teaching. Perhaps we can get there yet. It will still be a
great improvement in productivity.
Microsoft
“universal translator” chatters Chinese in your own voice
Chris Davies, Nov 9th
2012
http://www.slashgear.com/microsoft-universal-translator-chatters-chinese-in-your-own-voice-09256313/
Microsoft has developed a “universal translator” that not
only converts English speech into Chinese in real-time, but
does so while preserving the speaker’s own voice.
Demonstrated in China recently, the technology is based on joint
research into Deep Neural Networks by the software giant and the
University of Toronto, Microsoft’s chief research officer Rick
Rashid writes, using an hour’s worth of prerecorded speech
example data to cut together a new, translated mashup.
Microsoft first
started talking about the universal translator project earlier
this year, revealing that the system can handle Spanish and Italian
in addition to Mandarin Chinese. Recordings from both the speaker and
a native Chinese speaker are required for the English-Chinese
conversion, with the properties of the English speaker mapped onto a
few hours’ worth of Chinese speech that can be reworked to suit a
broad variety of phrases.
The big difference
between early presentations of the technology and the October 25 demo
in China is the degree of accuracy Microsoft has managed to achieve.
Rashid says the word error rate has been cut by around 30-percent,
meaning around one word in 7 or 8 is now incorrect.
“Of course, there
are still likely to be errors in both the English text and the
translation into Chinese, and the results can sometimes be humorous”
Rashid warns. “Still, the technology has developed to be quite
useful.”
Further refinement
will be enabled when Microsoft loads in more training data, it’s
expected, as the Deep Neural Networks learn more about how the human
brain processes audio. Still, there’s no telling when the system
might show up in your Windows Phone.
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