@article{Rudnicky:1994, abstract = {Speech recognition and speech synthesis are technologies of particular interest for their support of direct communication between humans and computers through a communications mode humans commonly use among themselves and at which they are highly skilled. Both manipulate speech in terms of its information content; recognition transforms human speech into text to be used literally (e.g., for dictation) or interpreted as commands to control applications, and synthesis allows the generation of spoken utterances from text.}, added-at = {2007-12-14T02:46:02.000+0100}, author = {Rudnicky, Alexander I. and Hauptmann, Alexander G. and Lee, Kai-Fu}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/24ed799d4431231eb901d366520b7b231/diego_ma}, interhash = {f0007f22ab5c7f9398482d12121ba894}, intrahash = {4ed799d4431231eb901d366520b7b231}, journal = {Communications of the ACM}, keywords = {speech}, number = 3, pages = {52-57}, timestamp = {2007-12-14T02:46:02.000+0100}, title = {Survey of Current Speech Technology}, volume = 37, year = 1994 }