Speech enabled shopping application using Microsoft SAPI

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Shi, Hao and Maier, Alexander (1996) Speech enabled shopping application using Microsoft SAPI. International Journal of Computer Science and Network Security, 6 (9). pp. 33 to 37. ISSN 1738-7906

Abstract

PCs are no longer a playground for a few computer freaks. They have changed from big pocket calculators to be used as everyday tools with seemingly unlimited options. In modern countries using a computer has become a basic requirement like reading and writing. The importance of digital information has already reached such an enormous level that many start-up companies and even corporations provide information largely digital. Also politicians around the world try to find their ways to a paperless e-Government. Obviously this is a positive progress because it means up to date information at any time and for everybody. But is this really accessible to everybody? People with disability such as visual impaired are often forgotten though the number of the elderly for who it's very hard to identify the screen text is already high and increasing continuously during the next decades. So it would be a real relief to have the option to use ears to listen to the contents and use voices to navigate and control the computer systems. Even if sometime it is for normal people, it would be more comfortable to work with speech enabled applications. Microsoft has designed an interface called SAPI (Speech Application Programming Interface) which supports dynamic speech input and output, and integrated it in its current operating system. With the API it is possible to develop speech enabled applications without caring about the details of synthesis and recognition. In this paper, a windows application ispresented to demonstrate the speech-enabled application using Microsoft SAPI.

Item type Article
URI https://vuir.vu.edu.au/id/eprint/612
Subjects Historical > Faculty/School/Research Centre/Department > School of Management and Information Systems
Historical > Faculty/School/Research Centre/Department > School of Engineering and Science
Historical > RFCD Classification > 280000 Information, Computing and Communication Sciences
Keywords Speech-enabled applications, Windows applications, Microsoft SAPI, visual impaired
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