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Podcast: Voice Recognition Software — One Facility's Perspective

September 27, 2011

A recent nonscientific Diagnostic Imaging poll revealed a divided community when it comes to voice recognition software. Half of respondents said they use the tool, and that it speeds turnaround time and provides accurate reports. Twenty-nine percent said that although they use it, they find it hard to use and not as accurate. And 21 percent said they don't use it at all, saying it's cumbersome and doesn't fit into the workflow.

Indeed it depends on the facility and the software, and there are plenty of success stories out there. Diagnostic Imaging spoke with Shawn Putman and Jessica Roberts at Muskogee Regional Medical Center in Oklahoma, where they are using voice recognition software and seeing the benefits.

Voice Recognition Software — One Facility's Perspective

Voice Recognition Software — One Facility's Perspective

 

 

 

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by David Jones | November 14, 2012 3:02 AM EST

Automatic voice recognition software normally reduces the manual transcription needs. But Automatic voice recognition technology is not still matured to produce accurate transcription for non-American accents, or with people speaking quickly or multiple speakers audio files. If you have more than one voice it is almost impossible to get a good transcript. Add to that any background noise or a weak recording and you can pretty much forget it.

So, after automatic transcription, you have to massage this transcription into the final form. Some of the massages are

Correct incorrectly transcribed words/phrases.
Correct punctuation/sentence breaks.
Define paragraph breaks.

For automatic transcription, you can also refer

http://audacity.sourceforge.net/

In this scenario, better to go for manual transcription. For accurate and cost-effective manual transcription, please refer:
http://synergytranscriptionservices.com/Transcription-Services.aspx

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