Using automated syllable counting to detect missing information in speech transcripts from clinical settings
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27690Dato
2022-07-05Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Diaz-Asper, Marama; Holmlund, Terje Bektesevic; Chandler, Chelsea; Diaz-Asper, Catherine; Foltz, Peter W.; Cohen, Alex S.; Elvevåg, BritaSammendrag
Speech rate and quantity reflect clinical state; thus automated transcription holds potential clinical applications.
We describe two datasets where recording quality and speaker characteristics affected transcription accuracy.
Transcripts of low-quality recordings omitted significant portions of speech. An automated syllable counter
estimated actual speech output and quantified the amount of missing information. The efficacy of this method
differed by audio quality: the correlation between missing syllables and word error rate was only significant
when quality was low. Automatically counting syllables could be useful to measure and flag transcription
omissions in clinical contexts where speaker characteristics and recording quality are problematic.
Sitering
Diaz-Asper, Holmlund, Chandler, Diaz-Asper, Foltz, Cohen, Elvevåg. Using automated syllable counting to detect missing information in speech transcripts from clinical settings. Psychiatry Research. 2022;315Metadata
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