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@@ -11,10 +11,14 @@ Listening to the outputs of this tool feels like being taught how to listen like |
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You never really know what speech interfaces, like Siri, hear, or how. The Word Processor shows ASR at work. By appropriating methods from speech-to-text and ASR as parameters for text and audio composition and experimentation, the Word Processor is a means to ‘lift the hood’ or ‘open the black box’ of otherwise opaque but ubiquitous technology. Here, machine listenings, mishearings and nonhearings become material for making and knowing. |
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## What's going on, hear? |
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![Listening Exercise One - Siri](audio:static/audio/asksiri.mp3) |
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![Listening Exercise - Siri](audio:static/audio/asksiri.mp3) |
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{{< nosup >}}[(Listening again with the text and video)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=os_E-vQgqbc){{< /nosup >}} |
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## More compositions |
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{{< nosup >}}[we can search for it later](https://youtu.be/w8VKJpQe8Xg){{< /nosup >}} |
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{{< nosup >}}[IBM](https://youtu.be/l-MtanP2obs){{< /nosup >}} |
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### Listen again with the text and maybe the video |
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What's going on, hear? |
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{{< nosup >}}[(Listening Exercise One - Siri)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=os_E-vQgqbc){{< /nosup >}} |
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