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About
the Authors and Radio Rex
Michael Cohen cofounded Nuance Communications in 1994. He
has served in a variety of roles at Nuance, including Vice President
of Dialog R&D. He created the Nuance Professional Services team,
which engages with customers to design and deploy applications,
and led the group through the first 22 deployments of Nuance technology.
He created the Dialog R&D group, which has been responsible
for voice user interface research, for Nuance's natural language
understanding technology (including Say Anything and Accuroute),
and for designs of interfaces for products such as Voyager, the
Nuance voice browser.
Before
founding Nuance, Michael was at SRI International for more than
10 years. At SRI he led numerous projects in acoustic modeling and
speech technology development. He led the SRI ATIS project, which
combined speech recognition and natural language understanding technology
to create an early spoken language understanding system.
Michael
has published more than 70 papers and holds eight patents related
to speech and VUI technology. He is a frequent speaker at conferences
and industry trade shows. Michael is a consulting professor at Stanford
University and serves on the board of directors of the Applied Voice
Input/Output Society (AVIOS). He received his Ph.D. in computer
science from UC Berkeley.
In his spare time, Michael composes and plays music. In the summer
of 2000, his band, the Mike Cohen Sextet, performed at the Montreux
Jazz Festival.
James Giangola considers himself an "industrial linguist,"
on a mission to apply principles of natural conversation, from prosody
to the discourse level, to engineered dialogs. In addition to dialog
design, his expertise includes speech synthesis, concatenation planning
and production, and voice coaching. No matter the area of interface
design, however, his overriding concern is to offer the user a familiar
linguistic experience, and therefore one that is comfortable and
comprehensible. James's design philosophy is not limited to English-language
interfaces; he has also helped to create natural-sounding, persona-rich
interfaces in French, Portuguese, German, and Japanese.
James
holds linguistics degrees from Brown University, the Monterey Institute
of International Studies, and U.C. San Diego, and he has 10 years
of experience teaching languages at the high school and university
level. He is also the author of The Pronunciation of Brazilian
Portuguese (Munich: Lincom Europa, 2001).
James resides in Salvador, Brazil, where he maintains a linguistic
consulting business for American and Brazilian companies needing
help with interface design and brand naming.
Jennifer Balogh
is a Speech Consultant at Nuance Communications,
where she designs and evaluates interfaces for spoken language systems.
She has worked on deployed applications for customers such as AT&T,
Charles Schwab, and TD Waterhouse and has contributed to a number
of Nuance products, including Nuance Call Steering, the Vocalizer
TTS engine, the voice browser Voyager, and SpeechObjects. She has
also conducted research on dialog design techniques that optimize
user satisfaction, and holds several patents.
Previously,
she researched language disorders at the Aphasia Research Center
at the Boston VA Hospital. She also cofounded Phaedrus Internet
Development, Inc., a Web solutions provider for corporations and
medical institutions. She has presented at conferences such as CHI
Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems and CUNY Conference
on Human Sentence Processing. She has also lectured for courses
at Stanford University, UC San Diego, University of San Francisco,
and University of San Diego. Jennifer has published several papers
in journals such as Brain and Language and International
Journal of Speech Technology. She received her Ph.D. in psychology
from UC San Diego and holds a B.A. from Brandeis University.
Radio Rex, pictured on the cover of the book, was the first
automated spoken language understanding system ever developed. Rex
was first produced in 1911. Unlike many spoken language systems
developed over the following eight decades, it was a commercial
success! Radio Rex was a children's toy. Rex sat in his doghouse
until the child said "Rex," at which point he would eagerly
jump out. The technology behind Rex is briefly described at the
beginning of Chapter 2.
Photo
of Radio Rex courtesy of Hy Murveit. Rex himself courtesy of the
private toy collection of Michael Cohen.
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