NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING: UNLOCKING THE POWER OF TEXT AND SPEECH DATA
Author | : Dr. Kirti Shukla |
Publisher | : Xoffencerpublication |
Total Pages | : 249 |
Release | : 2023-05-23 |
ISBN-10 | : 9789394707931 |
ISBN-13 | : 939470793X |
Rating | : 4/5 (31 Downloads) |
Download or read book NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING: UNLOCKING THE POWER OF TEXT AND SPEECH DATA written by Dr. Kirti Shukla and published by Xoffencerpublication. This book was released on 2023-05-23 with total page 249 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The subject matter that is discussed in this book goes by a number of other names, including natural Words such as "computational linguistics," "human language technology," "language processing," and "language" are all terms that are used in computational linguistics. computer voice and language processing. All of these titles refer to the same subject matter. This burgeoning academic subfield comprises a diverse array of scholarly subfields and is referred to by a variety of distinct names. This burgeoning area of study tries to allow computers to carry out valuable tasks utilizing human language. Examples of these activities include easing human-machine communication, enhancing human-to-human communication, or simply carrying out meaningful processing of text or voice input. The education of computers in the aforementioned activities is one of the key goals of this burgeoning discipline, which is still relatively new. A conversational agent is only one example of a job that is favorable in this category; nevertheless, this is just one of many possible examples. The HAL 900 computer, which was featured in Stanley Kubrick's film "2001: A Space Odyssey" The protagonist of a film about a space journey is one of the most recognizable personalities to have come from the world of film in the 20th century. HAL is a man-made agent that is capable of complex language processing characteristics such as comprehending and speaking the English language. These skills were programmed into HAL by the people who developed the first Star Trek television series. At a pivotal point in the story, HAL even acquires the capacity to decipher what humans are saying by reading their lips. When he made his forecasts, we believe that HAL's creator, Arthur C. Clarke, was a little too excited about when an artificial agent such as HAL will be available to the general public. But where exactly did he make the mistake in his line of reasoning? What are the necessary steps that would need to be taken in order to build HAL, at the very least for the components that are associated with language? Conversational agents or dialogue systems are computer programs, like HAL, that are able to converse with people using natural language. Examples of such programs include Hal from the Star Trek franchise. These descriptors are assigned to the programs of their own accord.