YouTube's Auto Caps Not Only Help The Deaf, But Searchers Too
In a move
that will make hundreds of thousands more videos accessible to the deaf and
hearing impaired, Google Thursday announced that videos on its YouTube site
would sport machine-generated automatic captions.
Google has
offered user-generated captioned videos for three years. What makes
"auto-caps" different is that Google will now use the
speech-recognition algorithms employed in Google Voice to automatically
generate captions for all videos.
According
to Google's blog, 20 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute. The
goal for auto-caps is to quickly get more videos captioned. Not only will the
captions help the deaf and hearing-impaired help understand videos, but they
will also assist people around the world to access video content, improve
search and let viewers pinpoint exact sections of videos.
For now,
auto-caps will only be visible on a limited number of partner channels,
including U.C. Berkeley, Stanford, MIT, Yale, UCLA, Duke, UCTV, Columbia, PBS,
National Geographic, Demand Media, UNSW and most Google and YouTube channels. Google
has recognized the technology is not perfected, and is awaiting feedback from
both viewers and video owners before a broader rollout.
In
addition, Google announced automatic caption timing, or auto-timing, which
eases the process of creating captions manually. Video creators build and
upload a text file with all the words in the video. Google's automatic speech
recognition (ASR) technology discerns when the words are spoken and creates the
captions. Google hope the technology will bring even more captioned videos to
the site since it significantly reduces the cost in time and resources
necessary to create professional caption tracks.
Source: crn.com