Crash Course Computer Science - Season 1 Episode 36 Natural Language Processing
Today we’re going to talk about how computers understand speech and speak themselves. As computers play an increasing role in our daily lives there has been an growing demand for voice user interfaces, but speech is also terribly complicated. Vocabularies are diverse, sentence structures can often dictate the meaning of certain words, and computers also have to deal with accents, mispronunciations, and many common linguistic faux pas. The field of Natural Language Processing, or NLP, attempts to solve these problems, with a number of techniques we’ll discuss today. And even though our virtual assistants like Siri, Alexa, Google Home, Bixby, and Cortana have come a long way from the first speech processing and synthesis models, there is still much room for improvement.
Year: 2017
Genre:
Country: United States of America
Studio: YouTube, PBS Digital Studios
Director:
Cast: Carrie Anne Philbin
Crew:
First Air Date: Feb 22, 2017
Last Air date: Dec 21, 2017
Season: 1 Season
Episode: 40 Episode
Runtime: 12 minutes
IMDb: 0.00/10 by 0.00 users
Popularity: 0.836
Language: English
Keyword :
Episode
Early Computing
Electronic Computing
Boolean Logic & Logic Gates
Representing Numbers and Letters with Binary
How Computers Calculate - the ALU
Registers and RAM
The Central Processing Unit (CPU)
Instructions & Programs
Advanced CPU Designs
Early Programming
The First Programming Languages
Programming Basics: Statements & Functions
Intro to Algorithms
Data Structures
Alan Turing
Software Engineering
Integrated Circuits & Moore’s Law
Operating Systems
Memory & Storage
Files & File Systems
Compression
Keyboards & Command Line Interfaces
Screens & 2D Graphics
The Cold War and Consumerism
The Personal Computer Revolution
Graphical User Interfaces
3D Graphics
Computer Networks
The Internet
The World Wide Web
Cybersecurity
Hackers & Cyber Attacks
Cryptography
Machine Learning & A.I.
Computer Vision
Natural Language Processing
Robots
Psychology of Computing
Educational Technology
The Future of Computing