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To: GC who wrote (528)4/24/1999 1:04:00 PM
From: GC  Respond to of 767
 
page 7 ..................

7
Speech technology is fast becoming
one of the best tools for aiding chil-dren
and adults with learning disabili-ties.
The new L&H Kurzweil 3000
version 3.0 is a PC-based reading sys-tem
that scans, recognizes and displays
different types of documents, then
reads them aloud while highlighting
the text to aid comprehension.
The L&H Kurzweil 3000 3.0 adds a
number of features to the previous ver-sion
including voice annotation, word-prediction,
and spell checking, making
it a more complete reading and learn-ing
tool. The program recognizes text-books,
magazines, letters and other
printed material, as well as information
accessed through the computer such as
Web pages and text input by users. It
helps users improve reading skills and
comprehension by displaying the docu-ment
on the user's monitor, highlight-
ing words and phrases, while simulta-neously
reading it aloud using text-to-speech
technology.
The product makes studying easier
by letting users add their own notes to
text as they read it by simply dictating
their thoughts to the system. In previ-ous
versions, users could add notes
using the keyboard only.
“This is an excellent example of
how the power of speech technology
can help people improve a critically
important and enjoyable skill — read-ing,”
said Ray Kurzweil, L&H technol-ogy
advisor. “People with dyslexia or
other learning disabilities, as well as
those who simply want to improve
their reading skills, can receive verbal
feedback and guidance from this sys-tem
and markedly increase their read-ing
and studying ability.”
New Kurzweil 3000 reading system helps
the disabled to reading and studying ability.

L&H begins development of Greek, Russian,
Farsi, and other MidEastern and Eastern
European languages

L&H has established new strategic relationships for developing speech recogni-tion
capabilities for several new languages. The languages include Russian,
Ukrainian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Greek, Farsi and Bahassa. The company is also
in the process of developing new programs for other languages such as Turkish,
Hindu and Tamil.
L&H currently markets, or has under development, text to speech (TTS),
small and large vocabulary automatic speech recognition (ASR), machine trans-lation
and other speech and language components in 12 languages — US and
UK English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Dutch, Portuguese, Japanese,
Chinese, Korean, Arabic — and is developing the Scandinavian languages.
When development of these new languages is completed next year, L&H will
have access to 36 languages for use in a wide variety of applications such as tele-phony,
dictation, translation, Internet, and education.

“We at Microsoft applaud Lernout & Hauspie's initiatives in language devel-opment
for speech and language applications,” said John Duncan, product man-ager
for Microsoft Office. “Clearly the market need exists for multilingual offer-ings.
In fact, at Microsoft we are introducing Microsoft Office products in more
than 30 languages.”

L&H gets large-vocabulary
speech engine from BBN

BBN is one of the true internet pio-neers.
The Cambridge, Mass. compa-ny
was one of the original team of
developers for Arpanet, the early
Defense Department research net-work
that eventually led to the inter-net
we know so well today.
Now part of GTE Internetworking,
BBN Technologies has formed an
alliance with L&H to license and fur-ther
develop the BBN HARK
Recognizer large-vocabulary speech
recognition engine and toolkit. In
exchange, BBN Technologies will
license a range of speech technolo-gies
from L&H, including L&H
RealSpeak text-to-speech technology
that produces high quality, human-sounding
synthesized speech.
The BBN HARK Recognizer is a
very accurate, large-vocabulary engine
that will give L&H and its customers
the capability to design high-end tele-phony
applications including call cen-ters,
operator services, automated
attendants, and interactive voice sys-tems.
The agreement also calls for
L&H and BBN Technologies to begin
a multi-year research and develop-ment
initiative.



To: GC who wrote (528)4/24/1999 1:10:00 PM
From: GC  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 767
 
page 8.............

News Roundup: News and events from L&H and its divisions

World's first dictation software
is now available for Cantonese

With more than a billion native speakers, Chinese is far
and away the most widely spoken language in the world.
Now, L&H has unveiled the first PC-based Cantonese con-tinuous
speech recognition product. Making its worldwide
debut in Hong Kong, the unique product is called SP2.
Users simply dictate in a continuous natural voice to
enter Chinese text in tradtional Chinese characters. The
integrated system enables users to switch to handwriting
recognition using a graphics tablet.
L&H also expects to introduce two Mandarin language
versions by Spring. One will be for Beijing accent Mandarin
in simplified Chinese and the other one is for Taiwanese
accent Mandarin in traditional Chinese.
SP2 was originally developed by Louis Woo and Yen-Lu
Chow, co-founders of Asiaworks Ltd. Asiaworks' an L&H
strategic partner.

“The key challenge lies in the difficulty of Asian language
input on keyboard-based PCs,” said Yen-Lu Chow.

“To ensure accuracy, all speech samples were collected in
Hong Kong to get a good representation of different accents
in the local dialect,” said Louis Woo, president of L&H Asia.
“Not only does the system have words commonly used in
Hong Kong, it also includes a rich dictionary of phrases,
including Hong Kong slang, names of districts, streets, com-panies
and celebrities.”

Voice-driven tablet computer is aimed
at healthcare mentoring

Hand-held tablet computers are just
around the turn of the century and
one of the first applications is bound
to be in the medical field. Intelliworxx,
a Florida company, has signed an
agreement to incorporate L&H speech
technology for use with its new
VoiceTablet™ tablet computer.
The first voice-driven application
will be the Intelliworxx internet
browser-based mentoring application
called iM3™. As a partner, L&H will
also help bring the Intelliworxx
VoiceTablet™ — the only Pentium™ II
tablet computer designed for voice —
to its healthcare customer base.
Intelliworxx Interactive Multi-Media
Mentoring™ (iM3™), which is built
around Microsoft Internet Explorer,
allows users to create browser-based
mentoring programs for education,
medical diagnosis and virtually any
other field from medicine to auto repair.
“Our agreement with Intelliworxx is
a natural fit,” said Chris Force, vice
president of the L&H Health Care
Solutions Group. “By combining their
cutting edge mobile applications and
electronics with our speech recognition
technology, we can offer healthcare
solutions that improve patient care,
streamline information gathering, and
lower costs.”

Quincy Hospital first to
test Clinical Voice Station

Everything a doctor, nurse, or other
medical professional does is recorded,
filed, and used in a variety of medical
reports. Virtually all of it is dictated,
then transcribed, typed, edited,
retyped, reviewed and recorded.
Now, at Quincy Hospital in Quincy,
Mass., doctors in the Emergency
Medicine Department will be doing
something different. Physicians create
reports using standard transcription ser-vice
or voice recognition, all from a sin-gle
workstation. The hospital is the first
to test a new solution developed jointly
by L&H and MedQuist, the U.S. leader
in medical transcription services with
more than 6,000 transcriptionists.
Quincy Hospital will begin trial test-ing
the Clinical Voice Station immedi-ately
in its Emergency Department,
which serves about 30,000 patients a
year. The hospital is one of the first in
the region to use speech recognition
department-wide.