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First Low Cost, Efficient Search Engine for Video Content

Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Intelligent Analysis and Information Systems IAIS in Sankt Augustin, Germany, have developed a video speech recognition system that does not require expensive updating measures.

With video content becoming ever more plentiful on the Web and in police and security operations generally, the problem of finding a specific segment which one recalls is ever more challenging.

It's a problem that TV journalists have long coped with, one they usually solved with detailed notes and time codes in the video tracks. However, as speech recognition software developed, journalists and other media archivists no longer had to painstakingly search to find a specific video section. But they had to invest some serious money in speech recognition software which still required the search to be updated regularly by specialists. (These systems are based on a kind of thesaurus containing all the words they can recognize. However, new topics and personalities bring along new words like "financial crisis" or names such as "Obama". These terms need to be transferred to the thesaurus so that they can be found.)

According to a news release, researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Intelligent Analysis and Information Systems IAIS in Sankt Augustin, Germany have developed a speech recognition system that does not require expensive updating measures.

"Our system is based on a syllable thesaurus instead of a word thesaurus. Conventional speech recognizers can only discern a limited number of words, while the total number of words in existence is too vast to handle. The number of existing syllables, on the other hand, is manageable. With about 10,000 stored syllables we can make up any word," says IAIS scientist Daniel Schneider in the release. The program can even acquire new words independently by composing them from the stored syllables: fi-nan-cial cri-sis. It does not need to be updated and so does not entail any running costs.

For each search, the programs are first of all split into segments. Whenever a new speaker starts to talk or a film contribution begins - in which case the content of the audio track changes - the program saves the following scene as a new segment. The user can then navigate from speaker to speaker, and can choose to watch only the contributions of one particular interview partner. In a second step, the individual words are analyzed by speech algorithms. Users can apply the program just like a conventional search engine. You simply enter the search term, and a few milliseconds later the program has scanned 10,000 hours of processed data. Just like an Internet search engine, it displays the results in context in their given sentences. The user then simply clicks on a word to play back the relevant section of film material. The system can find over 85 percent of the spoken words in a program, and 99 out of a 100 located contributions are correct. A license model of the program is already available.

Photo by Chris Radcliff. CC Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic