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basic-speech-recognition-grammar

v0.0.3

Published

Basic grammar system for SpeechRecognition

Downloads

2

Readme

Basic speech recognition grammar - use case

When working with SpeechRecognition, you are given back a range of possibilities about word that the user said.

If your application works in the sense of "commands", meaning you know beforehand which words your are looking (listening) for, then this package could help you.

How to use

Install with npm i basic-speech-recognition-grammar

Import the tryFindNeedle method import { isLast, tryFindNeedle } from 'basic-speech-recognition-grammar';

In the onresult handler of SpeechRecognition, pass that whole event to tryFindNeedle.

This will return a GrammarResult, containing the status and possible result.

Example:

this.reco = new this.SpeechRecognition();
this.reco.continuous = false;
this.reco.interimResults = true;
this.reco.lang = this.language.code;
this.reco.maxAlternatives = 10;

this.reco.onresult = (x) => {
    if (!isLast(x)) { return; }

    var haystack  = ["red", "blue", "green"];
    var result = tryFindNeedle(x, haystack);
    if (result.resultType == ResultType.RecognitionNotFinished) {
        return;
    }
    if (result.resultType == ResultType.NoResult) {
        this.sayOutLoud(this.language.notFound);
        return;
    }
    if (result.resultType == ResultType.MultipleCandidates) {
        this.sayOutLoud(this.language.foundMultiple + result.conflictingResults.join(", "));
        return;
    }

    var heardCommand = result.result;
        // do sth with result.
};

Implementation details

The possible words said are compared with the predefined haystack you provide.

This comparison is done using this project.

The comparison is purely based on the written similarity, not the auditive similarity.

It is considered a "match" if the similarity is 0.6 or higher. This is configurable in the tryFindNeedle() options.

Spaces and capitalization are ignored when comparing strings.