Automating live and batch subtitling of multimedia contents for several European languages
Egileak: Carlos Mendes Metteo Raffaelli Thiago Luís Sérgio Paulo Nicola Piccinini Joao Neto Carlo Aliprandi
Data: 01.09.2016
Abstract
The subtitling demand of multimedia content has grown quickly over the last years, especially after the adoption of the new European audiovisual legislation, which forces to make multimedia content accessible to all. As a result, TV channels have been moved to produce subtitles for a high percentage of their broadcast content. Consequently,the market has been seeking subtitling alternatives more productive than the traditional manual process. The large effort dedicated by the research community to the development of Large Vocabulary Continuous Speech Recognition (LVCSR) over the last decade has resulted in significant improvements on multimedia transcription, becoming the most powerful technology for automatic intralingual subtitling. This article contains a detailed description of the live and batch automatic subtitling applications developed by the SAVAS consortium for several European languages based on proprietary LVCSR technology specifically tailored to the subtitling needs, together with results of their quality evaluation.
BIB_text
title = {Automating live and batch subtitling of multimedia contents for several European languages},
pages = {10823-108},
number = {18},
volume = {75},
keywds = {
Multimedia communication; Multimedia systems; Automatic speech recognition; Automatic subtitling; Subtitling quality; Access services
}
abstract = {
The subtitling demand of multimedia content has grown quickly over the last years, especially after the adoption of the new European audiovisual legislation, which forces to make multimedia content accessible to all. As a result, TV channels have been moved to produce subtitles for a high percentage of their broadcast content. Consequently,the market has been seeking subtitling alternatives more productive than the traditional manual process. The large effort dedicated by the research community to the development of Large Vocabulary Continuous Speech Recognition (LVCSR) over the last decade has resulted in significant improvements on multimedia transcription, becoming the most powerful technology for automatic intralingual subtitling. This article contains a detailed description of the live and batch automatic subtitling applications developed by the SAVAS consortium for several European languages based on proprietary LVCSR technology specifically tailored to the subtitling needs, together with results of their quality evaluation.
}
isi = {1},
doi = {10.1007/s11042-015-2794-z},
date = {2016-09-01},
year = {2016},
}