Reference documentation and code samples for the Cloud Speech-to-Text V1p1beta1 API class Google::Cloud::Speech::V1p1beta1::PhraseSet::Phrase.
A phrases containing words and phrase "hints" so that the speech recognition is more likely to recognize them. This can be used to improve the accuracy for specific words and phrases, for example, if specific commands are typically spoken by the user. This can also be used to add additional words to the vocabulary of the recognizer. See usage limits.
List items can also include pre-built or custom classes containing groups
of words that represent common concepts that occur in natural language. For
example, rather than providing a phrase hint for every month of the
year (e.g. "i was born in january", "i was born in febuary", ...), use the
pre-built $MONTH
class improves the likelihood of correctly transcribing
audio that includes months (e.g. "i was born in $month").
To refer to pre-built classes, use the class' symbol prepended with $
e.g. $MONTH
. To refer to custom classes that were defined inline in the
request, set the class's custom_class_id
to a string unique to all class
resources and inline classes. Then use the class' id wrapped in ${...}
e.g. "${my-months}". To refer to custom classes resources, use the class'
id wrapped in ${}
(e.g. ${my-months}
).
Speech-to-Text supports three locations: global
, us
(US North America),
and eu
(Europe). If you are calling the speech.googleapis.com
endpoint, use the global
location. To specify a region, use a
regional endpoint
with matching us
or eu
location value.
Inherits
- Object
Extended By
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts::ClassMethods
Includes
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts
Methods
#boost
def boost() -> ::Float
-
(::Float) — Hint Boost. Overrides the boost set at the phrase set level.
Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will
be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost,
the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative
boost will simply be ignored. Though
boost
can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case as well as adding phrases both with and without boost to your requests.
#boost=
def boost=(value) -> ::Float
-
value (::Float) — Hint Boost. Overrides the boost set at the phrase set level.
Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will
be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost,
the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative
boost will simply be ignored. Though
boost
can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case as well as adding phrases both with and without boost to your requests.
-
(::Float) — Hint Boost. Overrides the boost set at the phrase set level.
Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will
be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost,
the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative
boost will simply be ignored. Though
boost
can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case as well as adding phrases both with and without boost to your requests.
#value
def value() -> ::String
- (::String) — The phrase itself.
#value=
def value=(value) -> ::String
- value (::String) — The phrase itself.
- (::String) — The phrase itself.