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Multimodal signal processing : human interactions in meetings / edited by Steve Renals ... [et al.].

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, c2012.Description: xi, 273 p. : ill. ; 26 cmISBN:
  • 9781107022294 (hbk.)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 621.3822 22 MUL
Online resources: Summary: "Bringing together experts in multimodal signal processing, this book provides a detailed introduction to the area, with a focus on the analysis, recognition and interpretation of human communication. The technology described has powerful applications. For instance, automatic analysis of the outputs of cameras and microphones in a meeting can make sense of what is happening - who spoke, what they said, whether there was an active discussion and who was dominant in it. These analyses are layered to move from basic interpretations of the signals to richer semantic information. The book covers the necessary analyses in a tutorial manner, going from basic ideas to recent research results. It includes chapters on advanced speech processing and computer vision technologies, language understanding, interaction modeling and abstraction, as well as meeting support technology. This guide connects fundamental research with a wide range of prototype applications to support and analyze group interactions in meetings"--Summary: "This book is an introduction to multimodal signal processing. In it, we use the goal of building applications that can understand meetings as a way to focus and motivate the processing we describe. Multimodal signal processing takes the outputs of capture devices running at the same time - primarily cameras and microphones, but also electronic whiteboards and pens - and automatically analyses them to make sense of what is happening in the space being recorded. For instance, these analyses might indicate who spoke, what was said, whether there was an active discussion, and who was dominant in it. These analyses require the capture of multimodal data using a range of signals,followed by a low-level automatic annotation of them, gradually layering up annotation until information that relates to user requirements is extracted"--
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Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Library, Institute of Information and Communication Technology General Stacks 621.3822 MUL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available I001867

Includes bibliographical references and index.

"Bringing together experts in multimodal signal processing, this book provides a detailed introduction to the area, with a focus on the analysis, recognition and interpretation of human communication. The technology described has powerful applications. For instance, automatic analysis of the outputs of cameras and microphones in a meeting can make sense of what is happening - who spoke, what they said, whether there was an active discussion and who was dominant in it. These analyses are layered to move from basic interpretations of the signals to richer semantic information. The book covers the necessary analyses in a tutorial manner, going from basic ideas to recent research results. It includes chapters on advanced speech processing and computer vision technologies, language understanding, interaction modeling and abstraction, as well as meeting support technology. This guide connects fundamental research with a wide range of prototype applications to support and analyze group interactions in meetings"--

"This book is an introduction to multimodal signal processing. In it, we use the goal of building applications that can understand meetings as a way to focus and motivate the processing we describe. Multimodal signal processing takes the outputs of capture devices running at the same time - primarily cameras and microphones, but also electronic whiteboards and pens - and automatically analyses them to make sense of what is happening in the space being recorded. For instance, these analyses might indicate who spoke, what was said, whether there was an active discussion, and who was dominant in it. These analyses require the capture of multimodal data using a range of signals,followed by a low-level automatic annotation of them, gradually layering up annotation until information that relates to user requirements is extracted"--

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