Thursday, September 27, 2007

Enhance the user experience with the Java Speech API

The Java Speech API allows you to incorporate speech technology into user interfaces for your applets and applications based on Java technology. It also specifies a cross-platform interface to support command and control recognizers, dictation systems, and speech synthesizers. This article delves into the specifics of the Java Speech API and explains how you can use it to improve the user experience.
What’s behind the Java Speech API

Two core speech technologies are supported through the Java Speech API: speech synthesis and speech recognition.

Speech synthesis
Speech synthesis provides the reverse process of producing synthetic speech from text generated by an application, an applet, or a user. It is often referred to as text-to-speech technology.

The major steps in producing speech from text are as follows:

* Structure analysis: Processes the input text to determine where paragraphs, sentences, and other structures start and end. For most languages, punctuation and formatting data are used in this stage.
* Text pre-processing: Analyzes the input text for special constructs of the language. In English, special treatment is required for abbreviations, acronyms, dates, times, numbers, currency amounts, e-mail addresses, and many other forms. Other languages need special processing for these forms, and most languages have other specialized requirements.

The result of these first two steps is a spoken form of the written text. Here are examples of the differences between written and spoken text:

St. Mathews hospital is on Main St.
-> “Saint Mathews hospital is on Main street”

Add $20 to account 55374.
-> “Add twenty dollars to account five five, three seven four.”

The remaining steps convert the spoken text to speech:

* Text-to-phoneme conversion: Converts each word to phonemes. A phoneme is a basic unit of sound in a language.
* Prosody analysis: Processes the sentence structure, words, and phonemes to determine the appropriate prosody for the sentence.
* Waveform production: Uses the phonemes and prosody information to produce the audio waveform for each sentence.

Speech synthesizers can make errors in any of the processing steps described above. Human ears are well-tuned to detecting these errors, but careful work by developers can minimize errors and improve the speech output quality. The Java Speech API and the Java Speech API Markup Language (JSML) provide many ways for you to improve the output quality of a speech synthesizer.

Speech recognition
Speech recognition provides computers with the ability to listen to spoken language and determine what has been said. In other words, it processes audio input containing speech by converting it to text.

The major steps of a typical speech recognizer are as follows:

* Grammar design: Defines the words that may be spoken by a user and the patterns in which they may be spoken.
* Signal processing: Analyzes the spectrum (i.e., the frequency) characteristics of the incoming audio.
* Phoneme recognition: Compares the spectrum patterns to the patterns of the phonemes of the language being recognized.
* Word recognition: Compares the sequence of likely phonemes against the words and patterns of words specified by the active grammars.
* Result generation: Provides the application with information about the words the recognizer has detected in the incoming audio.

A grammar is an object in the Java Speech API that indicates what words a user is expected to say and in what patterns those words may occur. Grammars are important to speech recognizers because they constrain the recognition process. These constraints make recognition faster and more accurate because the recognizer does not have to check for bizarre sentences.

The Java Speech API supports two basic grammar types: rule grammars and dictation grammars. These types differ in various ways, including how applications set up the grammars; the types of sentences they allow; how results are provided; the amount of computational resources required; and how they are used in application design.
The Java Speech API’s classes and interfaces

The different classes and interfaces that form the Java Speech API are grouped into the following three packages:

* javax.speech: Contains classes and interfaces for a generic speech engine.
* javax.speech.synthesis: Contains classes and interfaces for speech synthesis.
* javax.speech.recognition: Contains classes and interfaces for speech recognition.

The Central class is like a factory class that all Java Speech API applications use. It provides static methods to enable the access of speech synthesis and speech recognition engines. The Engine interface encapsulates the generic operations that a Java Speech API-compliant speech engine should provide for speech applications.

Speech applications can primarily use methods to perform actions such as retrieving the properties and state of the speech engine and allocating and deallocating resources for a speech engine. In addition, the Engine interface exposes mechanisms to pause and resume the audio stream generated or processed by the speech engine. The Engine interface is subclassed by the Synthesizer and Recognizer interfaces, which define additional speech synthesis and speech recognition functionality. The Synthesizer interface encapsulates the operations that a Java Speech API-compliant speech synthesis engine should provide for speech applications.

The Java Speech API is based on the event-handling model of AWT components. Events generated by the speech engine can be identified and handled as required. There are two ways to handle speech engine events: through the EngineListener interface or through the EngineAdapter class.

You can get more information about any classes and interfaces in the Java Speech API JavaDocs.
Using the Java Speech API

To run a sample program, you will need a Java implementation that supports the Java Speech API. This example uses CloudGarden’s TalkingJava SDK (although you could use FreeTTS as a free alternative).

You need two files for developing your speech applications: cgjsapi.jar and cgjsapi.dll. Before you start working with the samples, make sure that the cgjsapi.dll file is available in your PATH and that the cgjsapi.jar file is available in your CLASSPATH.

package jsapi_demo;

import javax.speech.*;
import javax.speech.synthesis.*;
import java.util.*;

public class WhatTimeIsIt {

public static void main(String[] args) {
try {
Calendar calendar = new GregorianCalendar();
String sayTime = "Its " +
calendar.get(Calendar.HOUR) + " " +
calendar.get(Calendar.MINUTE) + " " +
(calendar.get(Calendar.AM_PM)== 0 ? "AM" : "PM");

Synthesizer synth = Central.createSynthesizer(null);
synth.allocate();
synth.resume();

synth.speakPlainText(sayTime,null);

synth.waitEngineState(Synthesizer.QUEUE_EMPTY);
synth.deallocate();

} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}

This simple program demonstrates the working of the Java Speech API by reading out the system time.
Implementations

The Java Speech API is a freely available specification. Here are three implementations:

* FreeTTS: This open-source speech synthesizer is written entirely in Java. It requires JDK 1.4.
* IBM Speech for Java: It only supports speech recognition, and it is a pretty old engine.
* Festival: This general multilingual speech synthesis system was developed by the Centre for Speech Technology Research at the University of Edinburgh. It offers a full text-to-speech system with various APIs, as well an environment for research and development of speech synthesis techniques.

No comments: