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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page review of the rapid technological evolution that has enabled speech recognition. This paper discusses this evolution in reference to Moore’s Law, and industry applications and problems. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPcmpSpeechRecog.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Computers can be contended to be the most important development in modern society. The have enabled us to do everything from rapid mathematical
computations to complex graphical productions in what is essentially the blink of an eye. One of the most recent advancements in computer technology is speech recognition. Speech recognition
facilitates our interaction with computers in ways that we could only barely comprehend just a couple of decades ago. Speech recognition, however, is not yet fully evolved. It
still has many problems to overcome if it is to become our primary means of human to computer interactions. Fortunately, technological advancements are proceding at an almost astronomical rate.
Rapid Technological Evolution Computer technology has evolved within
an incredibly short period of time in human history. Speech recognition has seemingly emerged in what is a blink of an eye in terms of the evolution of computer
technology. In reality, however, speech recognition has been a goal for many years. At least some advancements in the field were made in the 1950s, in fact.
Bell Labs, for example, developed the capability within the telephone industry to recognize spoken numbers in 1952 (Economist, 2007). These early developments were, of course, quite crude, compared to
the current capabilities in speech recognition. In the last few years the field advanced tremendously fast. The rapid evolution that
characterizes the modern state of speech recognition can be credited to the exponential rate with which computer technology is changing. It was only in 1965, after all, that Intel
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