Google includes personalized voice recognition in new search for Android | Software News – Betanews

Google launched an update to Android’s voice search capability on Tuesday that incorporates speaker recognition to improve results.

The new “personalized recognition” feature is currently quite limited: it’s only available in English in the United States on Android devices running 2.2 and above.

When turned on, the new feature stores your voice searches and builds a statistical profile based upon the pitch and timbre of your voice and the pronunciation and pace of your speech.

“Speech recognition is based on statistical modeling,” Google’s help file on the technology says. “To recognize spoken words, we compare the input search to a statistical model of the language and try to find the closest match – the system’s best guess at what the user said…Knowing what you said in the past allows us to build specialized models that are designed to match your voice and your words.”

via Google includes personalized voice recognition in new search for Android | Software News – Betanews.

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Biometric identification faces real-world hurdles – USATODAY.com

Released Friday by the National Research Council, the ” Biometric Recognition: Challenges and Opportunities” report headed by Hewlett-Packard chief Joseph Pato concludes all biometric recognition technologies are “inherently fallible.”

“A lot of things possible on a TV series just don’t work that way in real life,” says panel member Bob Blakley of researcher Gartner, in Stamford, Conn. “While there are lots of good uses for biometric recognition, there are lots of ways to create systems that waste time, cost too much and don’t work very well.”

Fingerprints are the best-known example of a biometric recognition marker — a physical trait that can serve to identify people reliably, such as facial features, voice, signature and even walk. “Biometric recognition has been applied to identification of criminals, patient tracking in medical informatics, and the personalization of social services, among other things,” notes the report.

Federal agencies such as the FBI and Department of Homeland Security are funding research in improved biometric screening, but the report cautions they’re not doing basic research into whether the physical characteristics involved are truly reliable or how they change with aging, disease, stress or other factors. None look stable across all situations, the report says. Deployment of biometric screening devices at airports (which is not currently planned), borders or elsewhere without understanding the biology or the population being screened may lead to long lines, false positives and missed opportunities to catch criminals or terrorists, suggests Blakley.

via Biometric identification faces real-world hurdles – USATODAY.com.

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Audio Files Present Challenges For Computer Forensics and E-Discovery | Burgess Forensics

While many of the tools for searching and storing data are effective, and accurate, when it comes to audio, no such level of accuracy or ease yet exists for the purpose of searching for specific information. There are currently three means of searching audio: phonetic search, transcribing by hand, and automatic transcription.

Phonetic search technology matches wave patterns, or phonemes, to a library of known wave patterns. For example, the acronym “B2B” would be represented by the following phonemes: “_B _IY _T _UW _B _IY” (Wikipedia example from Nexidia, a company involved in speech recognition systems). Given the wide variation in modes of speaking, pronunciation, accents and dialects, the accuracy of this method is spotty. It produces many false hits. And while it may identify sections and phrases that are of interest, it doesn’t transcribe the audio into text – the audio must then be listened to.

Manual transcription of audio so that transcribed text can then be automatically searched, is time-consuming. As it depends upon a listener to type the words as they are heard, this labor-intensive task can also be very expensive. There may be security concerns, as the audio goes outside the company (or perhaps the country) to be transcribed.

Machine transcription is the one automated means of converting audio to text. But it suffers from accuracy issues. It compares “heard” audio with known libraries, again facing issues of differing pronunciations, terms not in existing libraries, and clarity of recording. While high-quality recordings can lend themselves to recognition rates of 85% or so (a positive-looking number until compared with the nearly 100% accuracy of pure text searches), when dealing with voice mail, accuracy dips down as low as 40%.

The new Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) require companies to have a means of identifying key communications and data sources. That data must then be saved. For the sake of efficiency, both in the optimizing amount of storage required, and diminishing the volume of data that must be identified and produced for litigation, it is also important to be able to accurately identify data that is unnecessary.

While requirements for retention of data increase, and storage costs go down, identifying what audio should be kept and what should be deleted can be costly. As such information is digitized, it must nonetheless be stored and indexed (or searched after the fact). The technology is not mature, and is evolving. There may be an opening for an innovative company to prosper here, especially if able to produce some kind of breakthrough in voice-to-text technology. In the meanwhile, companies face a difficult issue in deciding what stays and what goes.

via Audio Files Present Challenges For Computer Forensics and E-Discovery.

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SEC is boosting scrutiny of offshore accounting, Fagel says – The China Post

Securities and Exchange Commission investigators are increasing scrutiny of U.S. companies’ offshore operations amid concern that accounting controls may be too weak, the head of the agency’s San Francisco office said.

“Some of the old-fashioned revenue recognition and accounting fraud issues that we used to see here, we’re seeing in their offshore operations,” Marc J. Fagel said in an interview in San Francisco Tuesday. “That’s a big theme.”

Fagel’s office oversees the Pacific Northwest and Northern California, including Silicon Valley, home to more technology jobs than anywhere else in the country. Fagel joined the SEC’s enforcement division in 1997, and helped lead probes of companies including Brocade Communications Systems Inc. and KLA- Tencor Corp. He was promoted to regional director in 2008.

While the region’s companies halted improper practices in recent years, such as misdating sales contracts to inflate quarterly revenue, similar misconduct is cropping up in overseas offices, Fagel said, without naming the firms.

“They’re not doing that so much in San Jose, but they may have a Hong Kong office where they haven’t figured out they’re doing that, or that it’s a problem,” he said. The SEC’s concern is growing as U.S. companies acquire businesses overseas or move their offices abroad, he added.

Fagel, 43, supervises about 100 attorneys, examiners and support staff. In addition to Northern California, his office focuses on Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Alaska, according to the agency’s Web site.

He plans to add as many as 12 professionals including attorneys and accountants this year to the enforcement and examination staff. To boost oversight of the US$14-trillion fund industry after several cases of fraud, including Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, the SEC is seeking recruits with expertise in hedge funds and complex financial instruments.

via SEC is boosting scrutiny of offshore accounting, Fagel says – The China Post.

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HONG KONG: International arbitration comes home

Hong Kong is steadily gaining global recognition as an international arbitration centre for the Asia Pacific region, providing an ideal venue for speedy and reliable dispute solutions.

That’s a key message that Mr. Yan Lung Wong, Secretary of Justice of the Hong Kong SAR government, conveyed to federal Minister of Justice, Robert Nicholson, Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin and other senior judiciary, legal, business, academic figures and government officials during his three-day visit to Ottawa and Toronto last week.

via Ottawa Business Journal.

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