15 Jun 2007
Microsoft has been issued with a patent for software that recognises the voice of a caller based on its tone.
The patent was awarded to Microsoft developer Andrei Pascovici on Tuesday, and works by analysing the tone of the voice and comparing it to a database of existing recordings to identify the caller.
"A voice input is received from the caller, and the characteristics are applied to a plurality of acoustic models, which includes a generic acoustic model and acoustic models of any previously identified callers, to obtain a plurality of respective acoustic scores," the patent reads.
"The caller is identified as one of the previously identified callers or as a new caller based on the plurality of acoustic scores.
"If the caller is identified as a new caller, a new acoustic model is generated ... which is specific to the new caller."
The technique breaks the speaker's voice into segments and then compares them segment by segment to pick the most probable subject based on previous experience.
Pascovici envisages the system being built into PCs, servers and handheld computers, and installed in call centres to speed up the transfer of callers to the correct department.
Latest stories from Communications
Related articles
Related jobs
Poll
What is the most important IT priority for your company this year?
Connect with V3.co.uk
This paper focuses on a series of best practices and techniques for development teams looking to improve their software development processes
Why good data management at all levels is essential in the modern business (video, 6mins)
My client is a well established, non profit organisation;...
PHP Web Developer – £30,000 - £35,000 PHP, MySQL, HTML...
HEAD OF DIGITAL - London - £80-95K + Excellent Bens...
Agile C# Developer - (North London) £55,000 - £65,000...
Keep up to date with the latest products, services and technologies from the world's leading IT companies. IThound.com brings you over 2,000 white papers, case studies and analyst reports.
Do you agree?