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Google Improves Voice Search (Again) For Its Mobile Apps - by Derrick Harris/ Tech/ Artificial Intelligence/ fortune.com
"Google GOOG 0.55% is claiming better voice search on its Android and iOS mobile apps, thanks to a new approach to the artificial intelligence technique the company uses to power that capability. A blog post published on Thursday, authored by a handful of Google researchers, explains in technical detail how they pulled off the improvements, which include faster, more-accurate transcriptions and better voice recognition in noisy places.
The boiled-down version is that Google switched its voice search system from one type of deep learning technique to another. In the old model, the system would analyze 10-millisecond snippets of audio and make predictions of words based on the sounds it recognized, regardless of the order in which they were uttered. The new model has a better memory, meaning it can consume larger snippets of audio and concern itself with the order in which particular sounds were spoken.
Here’s a more-technical, but illustrative explanation from the Google post:..."
Photograph by Chris Ratcliffe — Bloomberg via Getty Images
Richard
"Google GOOG 0.55% is claiming better voice search on its Android and iOS mobile apps, thanks to a new approach to the artificial intelligence technique the company uses to power that capability. A blog post published on Thursday, authored by a handful of Google researchers, explains in technical detail how they pulled off the improvements, which include faster, more-accurate transcriptions and better voice recognition in noisy places.
The boiled-down version is that Google switched its voice search system from one type of deep learning technique to another. In the old model, the system would analyze 10-millisecond snippets of audio and make predictions of words based on the sounds it recognized, regardless of the order in which they were uttered. The new model has a better memory, meaning it can consume larger snippets of audio and concern itself with the order in which particular sounds were spoken.
Here’s a more-technical, but illustrative explanation from the Google post:..."

Photograph by Chris Ratcliffe — Bloomberg via Getty Images
Richard