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- <text id=92TT1757>
- <title>
- Aug. 10, 1992: The Machines Are Listening
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 10, 1992 The Doomsday Plan
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TECHNOLOGY, Page 45
- The Machines Are Listening
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Computers can't take dictation, but they may already understand
- speech well enough to take your job
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-DeWitt--With reporting by Sam Allis/Boston
- </p>
- <p> In its television debut on ABC's Good Morning America,
- Casper the talking (and listening) computer was everything one
- would expect of a digital servant--friendly, eager to please
- but slightly hard of hearing. Morning host Joan Lunden,
- demonstrating Casper's capabilities on an Apple Macintosh
- computer, was able to persuade the system to program her VCR
- simply by talking into a microphone--although she had to
- repeat "Casper, accept program!" several times before the
- machine finally got the message. When the technology is
- perfected, say Apple executives, computers will be able to act
- on their human masters' every command, whether it be to pay the
- phone bill, schedule a lunch date or fetch the electronic mail.
- </p>
- <p> But the technology looked a lot less cute and friendly to
- telephone operators in June as AT&T installed similar systems
- in Seattle and in Jacksonville, Florida. The phone company has
- developed a computer system that can recognize words like
- "collect" and "person to person" about as well as any human. By
- the end of 1994, when AT&T is scheduled to finish deploying the
- new equipment across the U.S., it plans to close 31 offices and
- eliminate up to one-third of the jobs now held by 18,000
- long-distance operators.
- </p>
- <p> Although still in its infancy, the technology that enables
- machines to understand human speech may ultimately have as much
- impact on the way people do their work--and whether some of
- them still have work--as any advance since the computer. The
- ultimate goal of speech-recognition researchers--what they
- call their Holy Grail--is an automatic dictation machine that
- can listen to normal conversational speech and turn it into
- perfectly typed text. Such a system could carry out much of the
- work currently done by millions of human typists, transcribers,
- reporters, secretaries and stenographers.
- </p>
- <p> Automatic typewriters are probably still decades away. But
- there has been rapid progress in the underlying technology
- during the past few years, and even with the severe limitations
- of today's equipment there are now voice-recognition systems
- doing real tasks--and in some cases replacing real workers--at hundreds of sites across the U.S. Among those tasks:
- </p>
- <p> SORTING MAIL. The U.S. Postal Service uses
- voice-recognition systems in 30 big postal centers to sort
- bundles that cannot be processed by its automatic equipment. A
- human reads the ZIP codes off the labels, and the system directs
- the packages to the proper chute. The Postal Service figures it
- is cheaper to buy a computer to do the job than to train people
- to memorize which ZIP codes correspond to which locale.
- </p>
- <p> AUTHORIZING TRANSACTIONS. American Express has 500 human
- operators to field calls from retailers who do not have
- electronic equipment to get approvals. These employees verbally
- authorize 2.5 million charge-card transactions a month. Some of
- the authorizations are now being given by computers that ask for
- account numbers and purchase prices and then check cardholders'
- accounts automatically.
- </p>
- <p> TRADING STOCKS. Stockbrokers trading U.S. government
- securities at 40 sites and six major brokerage houses can now
- bark their buy and sell orders into special telephones and see
- their trades instantly recorded on computer screens at their
- desks. Similar systems are being used by quality-control
- inspectors on factory lines, by doctors filling out medical
- reports and by lawyers putting together paragraphs of
- boiler-plate prose.
- </p>
- <p> Voice recognition has come a long way in 20 years from the
- primitive systems that had to be trained to each individual's
- voice and could recognize words only when they were spoken one
- at a time. The most advanced systems today look not at whole
- words but at phonemes, the building blocks from which all words
- are constructed. That makes it possible to decode the slurred
- sentences that most people speak. The systems also use
- mathematical techniques to meld dozens of sampled voices,
- including male and female tones, so that the computers can
- recognize phrases spoken by just about anybody.
- </p>
- <p> The main limitation on such systems is that they can deal
- with only relatively small vocabularies--usually a few dozen
- words at a time. But that's enough to take orders at fast-food
- restaurants or to handle toll-free calls in which a customer
- must choose from a fixed list of catalog items, airline flights
- or bank transfer options. More than $150 million worth of
- voice-recognition systems were sold in the U.S. last year,
- according to Voice Information Associates, a research firm in
- Lexington, Mass., and the market is growing more than 40% a
- year. The big breakthrough will come when computers that can
- follow conversational speech become sufficiently powerful to
- handle vocabularies of 20,000 words. That would cover 97% of the
- words used in today's books, magazines and newspapers.
- </p>
- <p> Researchers argue among themselves about whether it will
- be five or 10 or even 20 more years before dictation systems
- are that smart. For court reporters, stenographers or anyone
- else whose primary job is to put spoken words onto paper, that
- time might be well spent figuring out how to adapt to the
- technology--or, if that's not possible, looking for a new
- career.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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