Tool may help deaf with webcasts Speech-recognition system could make captioning quick, less expensive From: The Journal News (Westchester, NY) - 10/25/2005 By: Julie Moran Alterio The IBM research team started a project called CaptionMeNow to create a tool that would caption a webcast only when a deaf person asks for it. "When someone who is deaf or hard of hearing comes across that webcast and wants it captioned, they click a CaptionMeNow button," she says. The video is processed through IBM's speech recognition system and automatically captioned. Because speech recognition software still isn't perfect, the transcript then could be routed to a human editor for quick fixes before posting online. Alexander Faisman, a software engineer who works closely with Dimitri Kanevsky (master inventor at IBM), says a human translator needs to be in the loop in part because the English language has so many words that sound exactly the same. "We know that the technology is not perfect. There are many situations when you need a very accurate transcript, or not that accurate, and it can all be translated into cost and time of the editing," he says. The CaptionMeNow project builds on IBM's earlier work to help a Canadian university caption lectures only when deaf and hard-of-hearing students are present in the classroom. IBM is using the technology to caption Web lectures for company employees - and it's not only popular among the deaf. "It turns out hearing employees are also using the technology," Kanevsky says. "We found that even hearing people sometimes prefer to read a lecture, because they can read very quickly." Read the entire article at: http://www.argusleader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051025/LIFE/510250323/1004 Links: CaptionMeNow - The Answer for Webcasts? http://deafness.about.com/b/a/212526.htm IBM products and research technologies http://www-306.ibm.com/able/solution_offerings/captionmenow.html New technology aids hard-of-hearing students http://www.charlatan.ca/articles/2004/12/02/stories/80605.html Accessibility, transcription, and access everywhere http://www.research.ibm.com/journal/sj/443/bainaut.html Speech Technologies: Captioning, Transcription and Beyond http://www.nynj.avios.org/Proceedings.htm Dimitri Kanevsky http://domino.research.ibm.com/comm/pr.nsf/pages/bio.kanevsky.html Contributed by Jamie Prioli