Germany plans to use voice recognition software to verify the many asylum applications it receives -- but The Swingin’ Stewardessesthe technology is far from perfect, experts warn.
SEE ALSO: This chatbot helps refugees claim asylum, for freeAccording to the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF), around 60 percent of people who sought asylum in the country in 2016 didn't have identification papers with them.
Now, German authorities are planning to use new voice recognition software to verify the asylum seekers' country of origin, according to a report on Die Welt.
The test, which will begin in two weeks and roll out widely in 2018, aims at analysing and identifying the dialects of people seeking asylum using recorded speech samples.
The software is based on the same voice authentication technology used by banks and insurance companies and would help officers review the applications' sources of origin.
Germany has used speech analysis since 1998 to determine country of origin.
Linguistic experts listen to recorded clips of conversation and can discern dialectic variations such as different names for food.
But the new technology has caused some concerns among experts in Germany.
Linguistic expert Monika Schmid told Deutsche Welle that identifying the region of origin could be extremely difficult.
"We have argued that in order to do so reliably, an analyst must have a solid background in linguistic analysis and be able to take into account a wide range of factors. For example, people will adapt the way they speak to the speech patterns of their interlocutors," she said.
"I don't see how automated software can distinguish whether a person uses a certain word or pronounces it in a particular way because this is part of their own repertoire or because they were primed to do so by the interviewer or interpreter."
Another expert, computer scientist Dirk Hovy at the University of Copenhagen, told Die Weltthat the new system would need the creation of a very accurate and broad database, which is a difficult task.
“Creating a perfect dataset is virtually impossible because language is constantly changing,” he said.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Trump signs AI education order to train K
Tiffany & Co. is selling a $9,000 ball of yarn and everything is ridiculous
Instagram will notify users when they're not disclosing #ad
Guy films brilliant ad to auction off his girlfriend's used car, but it worked too well
How to Easily Make iPhone Ringtones Using Only iTunes
Apple sees fewer people updating to iOS 11 as bugs persist
This fake WhatsApp app has been downloaded more than a million times
Scientists building a huge new telescope have reached a critical phase
Music is the secret weapon of Mario Speedrunners
New phishing scam hits emails of Netflix subscribers
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for April 23, 2025
'Stranger Things 3': What we want to see next season
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。