When General Motors speech
recognition engineer Robert Sims worked to develop one of the industry's first
in-car hands-free calling systems years ago, his goal was to make the call
quality clear enough that his wife wouldn't hang up on him.
Today, Buick's IntelliLink system
can do far more than place a call, and QuietTuning technologies like those in
the LaCrosse luxury sedan make using voice controls easier for owners
regardless of marital or relationship status.
QuietTuning is Buick's comprehensive
engineering process to reduce, block and absorb interior noise. For LaCrosse,
that means features like laminated window glass, triple door seals and liquid
applied sound deadening.
"There's definitely an advantage when we're developing voice controls in a quieter cabin," said
Sims. "The system's ability to hear a command relies on SNR, or
signal-to-noise ratio. If noise is extremely low like it is in the LaCrosse,
the user's voice, or signal, can be lower. In other words, a LaCrosse driver
can easily speak to the IntelliLink system at a normal, conversational volume."
As someone who drives an 80-mile
commute each day, quietness and minimizing distractions are a personal matter
for Sims. That's helped drive him to make Buick's IntelliLink voice commands
simple, intuitive and designed around the controls drivers need
most.
With IntelliLink - standard on every
2013 Buick - drivers can use voice commands to control navigation and audio
functions with the push of a button while keeping eyes on the road. With a
smartphone paired, IntelliLink voice commands can even tune to a Pandora
internet radio station or "like" a song.
How does it work? Using a microphone
in the cabin's headliner - optimally placed by Sims and his team - the system
uses a speech engine to match spoken words to known voice commands. When the
engine finds a match, that command is executed.
"We've also designed the system
with speaker adaptation, which means the engine is trained for different
accents or dialects," said Sims. "It can begin to predict speech
patterns based on those models. Your LaCrosse remembers your speech patterns
even after the car is turned off and on, but it can also identify another user
and predict his or her patterns as well."
Article courtesy of 4-traders.
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