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时间:2025-01-18 12:57:55 来源:网络整理编辑:休閑

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Germany plans to use voice recognition software to verify the many asylum applications it receives -

Germany plans to use voice recognition software to verify the many asylum applications it receives -- but the technology is far from perfect, experts warn.。

SEE ALSO:This chatbot helps refugees claim asylum, for free 。

According 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. 。

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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.。

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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  。Another expert, computer scientist Dirk Hovy at the University of Copenhagen, told 。

Die Welt。


that 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. 。
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