User talk:Justin Wabscott
Justin Wabscott, you are invited to the Teahouse!
[edit]Hi Justin Wabscott! Thanks for contributing to Wikipedia. We hope to see you there!
Delivered by HostBot on behalf of the Teahouse hosts 20:03, 18 August 2017 (UTC) |
Your submission at Articles for creation: Studio 3T (August 18)
[edit]- If you would like to continue working on the submission, go to Draft:Studio 3T and click on the "Edit" tab at the top of the window.
- If you need any assistance, you can ask for help at the Articles for creation help desk or on the reviewer's talk page.
- You can also use Wikipedia's real-time chat help from experienced editors.
AfC notification: Draft:Studio 3T has a new comment
[edit]Your submission at Articles for creation: Studio 3T (October 7)
[edit]- If you would like to continue working on the submission, go to Draft:Studio 3T and click on the "Edit" tab at the top of the window.
- If you need any assistance, you can ask for help at the Articles for creation help desk or on the reviewer's talk page.
- You can also use Wikipedia's real-time chat help from experienced editors.
Your submission at Articles for creation: Studio 3T (March 5)
[edit]- If you would like to continue working on the submission, go to Draft:Studio 3T and click on the "Edit" tab at the top of the window.
- If you now believe the draft cannot meet Wikipedia's standards or do not wish to progress it further, you may request deletion. Please go to Draft:Studio 3T, click on the "Edit" tab at the top of the window, add "{{db-self}}" at the top of the draft text and save.
- If you need any assistance, you can ask for help at the Articles for creation help desk or on the reviewer's talk page.
- You can also use Wikipedia's real-time chat help from experienced editors.
Your submission at Articles for creation: Studio 3T (April 19)
[edit]- If you would like to continue working on the submission, go to Draft:Studio 3T and click on the "Edit" tab at the top of the window.
- If you now believe the draft cannot meet Wikipedia's standards or do not wish to progress it further, you may request deletion. Please go to Draft:Studio 3T, click on the "Edit" tab at the top of the window, add "{{db-self}}" at the top of the draft text and click the blue "publish changes" button to save this edit.
- If you need any assistance, you can ask for help at the Articles for creation help desk or on the reviewer's talk page.
- You can also use Wikipedia's real-time chat help from experienced editors.
Tony Robinson
[edit]Tony Robinson is a pioneer in the application of recurrent neural networks to speech recognition, being one of the first to discover the practical capabilities of deep neural networks and how they can be used to benefit speech recognition. He first published on the topic while studying for his PhD at Cambridge University in the 1980s.
In 1995, Robinson formed SoftSound Ltd, a speech technology company which was acquired by search pioneer Autonomy with a view to using the technology to make unstructured video and voice data easily searchable. Robinson helped build the fastest vocabulary speech recognition system available at the time, and operating in more languages than any other model, by developing and focusing on recurrent neural networks.[1]
From 2008 – 2010, Robinson was the Director of the Advanced Speech Group at SpinVox, a provider of speech-to-text conversion services for carrier markets, including wireless, VoIP and cable. Their Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) system was for a while being used more than one million times per day and SpinVox was subsequently acquired by global speech technology company Nuance.
Tony Robinson was also founder of Speechmatics which launched its cloud-based speech recognition services in 2012. Speechmatics subsequently announced a significant technological breakthrough in accelerated new language modeling late in 2017[2]. Robinson continues to publish papers at the rapidly developing edges of speech recognition technology, especially in the area of statistical language modelling.[3]
- ^ Robinson, Tony; Hochberg, Mike; Renals, Steve (1996). "The Use of Recurrent Neural Networks in Continuous Speech Recognition". Automatic Speech and Speaker Recognition. 355: 233-258. doi:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-1367-0_10. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
{{cite journal}}
: Check|doi=
value (help); External link in
(help); More than one of|doi=
|pages=
and|page=
specified (help) - ^ Orlowski, Andrew. "Total recog: British AI makes universal speech breakthrough". The Register. Situation Publishing. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ^ Chelba, Ciprian; Mikolov, Tomas; Schuster, Mike. "One Billion Word Benchmark for Measuring Progress in Statistical Language Modeling". Arxiv.org. Cornell University Library. Retrieved 4 May 2018.