Category:Wake words: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:STT]] | |||
[[Category:Open Voice Assistants]] | |||
Wake word | Wake words, sometimes called key words, are a special category of Speech-To-Text. Wake words are used to "wake" a listening device and start its functions. In most cases these "wake words" are detected locally on devices while actual speech recognition is mostly done by internet cloud services. Mycroft defaults to "Hey, Mycroft" for its wake word, for instance. Some platforms allow for multiple wake words to be used. Coqui STT engine can even be configured as a wake word listener. | ||
'''Wake word listeners''': | |||
* [[Mycroft Precise]] | |||
* [[Porcupine]] | |||
* [[Snowboy]] | |||
* [[Howl]] | |||
* [[Coqui]] STT | |||
* Google tensorflow lite speech recognition | |||
Customizing wake words | '''Customizing wake words''' | ||
* What makes a good wake word? | * What makes [[a good wake word]]? | ||
* Building a | * Building a quality dataset |
Latest revision as of 06:58, 17 November 2021
Wake words, sometimes called key words, are a special category of Speech-To-Text. Wake words are used to "wake" a listening device and start its functions. In most cases these "wake words" are detected locally on devices while actual speech recognition is mostly done by internet cloud services. Mycroft defaults to "Hey, Mycroft" for its wake word, for instance. Some platforms allow for multiple wake words to be used. Coqui STT engine can even be configured as a wake word listener.
Wake word listeners:
- Mycroft Precise
- Porcupine
- Snowboy
- Howl
- Coqui STT
- Google tensorflow lite speech recognition
Customizing wake words
- What makes a good wake word?
- Building a quality dataset
Pages in category "Wake words"
The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.